Woman  in  the  War 

A  Bibliography 


Prepared  by 


MARION  R.  NIMS 

News  Department  of  the  Woman's  Committee 
Council  of  National  Defense 


WASHINGTON 

GOVERNMENT  PRINTING  OFHCE 

1918 


Columbia  Mnibergitp 
intljeCitpofiaetDgorfe 


LIBRARY 


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Woman  in  the  War 

A  Bibliography 


Prepared  by 


MARION  R.  NIMS 

News  Department  of  the  Woman's  Committee 
Council  of  National  Defense 


WASHINGTON 

GOVERNMENT  PRINTING  OFFICE 

1918 


FOREWORD. 


This  bibliography  was  undertaken  by  the  News  Department  of  the  Woman's 
Committee  of  the  Council  of  National  Defense  in  order  to  make  available  for 
the  work  of  the  committee  the  growing  mass  of  periodical  and  book  publica- 
tions on  the  conditions,  the  activities  and  the  needs  of  American  women  in  the 
war.  For  comparative  purposes  there  have  been  included  publications  con- 
cerning women  in  other  countries  and  a  few  relating  to  women's  activities  in 
other  wars. 

As  the  bibliography  was  prepared  primarily  for  the  use  of  the  Committee,  the 
titles  have  been  classified  and  arranged  according  to  its  departments  of  work. 

The  compiler  will  be  glad  to  have  her  attention  called  to  any  useful  work  or 
article  which  has  been  overlooked,  as  well  as  to  any  error  in  titles. 

Grateful  acknowledgment  is  made  for  assistance  given  by  the  following 
librarians  and  editors : 

Mr.  H.  H.  B.  Meyer,  chief  bibliographer,  Library  of  Congress. 

Miss  Julia  Laskey,  chief  cataloguer,  Washington  Public  Library. 

Miss  Claribel  Barnett,  librarian.  United  States  Department  of  Agriculture. 

Miss  Edith  Guerrier,  librarian,  United  States  Food  Administration. 

Miss  Laura  Thompson,  librarian.  United  States  Department  of  Labor. 

Miss  Alice  Mathews,  librarian,  Institute  of  Government  Research. 

Miss  Ethel  M.  Johnson,  librarian,  Women's  Educational  and  Industrial 
Union,  Boston. 

Mrs.  May  Lamberton  Becker,  editor,  Reader's  Guide,  New  York  Evening  Post. 

Mrs.  Florence  Finch  Kelly,  editor,  Book  Review,  New  York  Times. 

Ida  M.  Tarbell, 
Chairman,  News  Department,  Woman's  Committee, 

Council  of  NatioTial  Defense, 
3 


CONTENTS. 


Woman's  Committees  Page. 

Books  and  pamphlets 9 

Articles  in  periodicals 9 

Child  welfare- 
France  and  Belgium- 
Books  and  pamphlets 47 

France,  Italy,  Germany- 
Articles  in  periodicals 47 

Great  Britain- 
Books  and  pamphlets 48 

Articles  in  periodicals 48 

United  States- 
Books  and  pamphlets 49 

Articles  in  periodicals 49 

List  of  Children's  Bureau  publi- 
cations for  the  children's  year. .       51 
Educational  propaganda- 
Pamphlets 67 

Education- 
Great  Britain- 
Books  and  pamphlets 58 

Articles  in  periodicals 68 

United  States- 
Books  and  pamphlets 68 

Articles  in  periodicals 59 

Colleges  and  the  war- 
United  States- 
Books  and  i)amphlets 61 

Articles  in  periodicals 61 

Food  administration- 
General  food  situation- 
Books  and  pamphlets 16 

Articles  in  periodicals 16 

Central  Europe- 
Articles  in  periodicals 17 

Prance- 
Articles  in  periodicals 17 

Great  Britain- 
Books  and  pamphlets 18 

Articles  in  periodicals 18 

United  States- 
Articles  in  periodicals 18 

Food  production— agriculture— 
France- 
Articles  in  periodicals 11 

Great  Britain- 
Books  and  pamphlets 11 

Articles  in  i)eriodicals 11 

United  States- 
Books  and  pamphlets 15 

Articles  in  periodicals 15 

Health  and  recreation- 
Social  hygiene- 
Books  and  pamphlets 53 

Articles  in  periodicals 53 


Woman's  Committee — Continued.  Page. 
Health  and  recreation—  Continued. 
Police  and  patrols- 
Books  and  pamphlets 56 

Articles  in  periodicals 57 

Hospital  experiences  and  relief  work- 
On  the  western  front- 
Books  and  pamphlets 63 

Articles  in  periodicals 65 

On  the  eastern  front- 
Books  and  pamphlets 67 

Liberty  loan- 
Books  and  pamphlets 62 

Articles  in  periodicals 62 

Registration- 
Books  and  pamphlets 10 

Articles  in  periodicals 10 

Women  in  industry — 
General- 
Franco— 

B  ooks  and  pamphlets 19 

Articles  in  periodicals 19 

I  Germany— 

i  Books 20 

Articles  in  periodicals 20 

Great  Britain- 
Books  and  pamphlets, 21 

Articles  in  i)eriodicals 23 

United  States- 
Books  and  pamphlets 28 

Articles  in  periodicals 29 

Health  and  la-otection  of  workers- 
France— 

Articles  in  periodicals 44 

Great  Britain- 
Books  and  pamphlets 44 

Articles  in  periodicals 45 

United  States- 
Articles  in  periodicals 4fl 

Miscellaneous  occupations- 
Great  Britain- 
Books  and  pamphlets 41 

Articles  in  periodicals 41 

United  States- 
Articles  in  periodicab 43 

Munitions- 
France— 

B  oolcs  and  pamphlets .......       33 

Articles  in  periodicals 33 

Germany— 

A  rticles  in  periodicals 33 

Great  Britain— 

B  ooks  and  pamphlets 33 

Articles  in  periodicals 34 

5 


6 


CONTENTS. 


Woman's  Committee— Continued. 

Women  in  industry— Continued.  Page. 
Munitions — Continued. 
Italy- 
Articles  in  periodicals 36 

United  States 36 

Books 36 

Articles  in  periodicals 36 

Professions  and  science- 
Books 39 

Articles  in  periodicals 40 

Railways  and  street  cars- 
France— 

Articles  in  periodicals 36 

Germany- 
Articles  in  periodicals 37 

Great  Britain- 
Articles  in  periodicals 37 

United  States- 
Articles  in  periodicals 38 

General: 

The  Balkans  and  Greece- 
Books 68 

Articles  in  periodicals 68 


General— Continued. 

Belgium-  Page. 

Books 68 

Canada- 
Books  69 

Articles  in  periodicals 69 

France- 
Books  and  pamphlets 69 

Articles  in  periodicals 71 

Germany  and  Hungary- 
Books  and  pamphlets 72 

Articles  in  periodicals 73 

Great  Britain- 
Books  and  pamphlets 73 

Articles  in  periodicals 74 

Italy- 
Books  and  articles  in  periodicals 75 

Russia- 
Books  and  pamphlets 75 

Articles  in  periodicals 76 

Women  in  other  wars- 
Books 76 


sourc:es. 


BIBLIOGRAPHIES. 

Bureau  of  raixway  economics. 

List  of  references  to  articles  relating  to  the  employment  of  women  on  rail- 
roads and  street  railways.     Special  libraries,  v.  9,  October,  1917. 
List  of  references  on  the  relation  of  British  railways  to  the  Europeon  war. 
Special  libraries,  v.  9,  March  and  May,  1918. 
Detroit  public  library. 

Selected  list  of  references  of  employment  of  women  in  war  industries. 
4  p.,  typewritten,  April,  1917. 
Lange,  F.  W.  T. 

Books  on  the  great  war.    An  annotated  bibliography  of  literature  issued 
during  the  European  conflict.     With  general  indexes. 
London,  Grafton  &  Co.,  1915-16,  4  v. 
Russell  Sage  foundation. 

Women  in  industry  in  war  time.     Bulletin  No.  26,  December,  1917. 
Social  welfare  in  time  of  war  and  disaster. 

A  bibliography,  prepared  by  Christine  McBride  and  S.  M.  Kingsbury,  Sur- 
vey, V.  39,  October  27  and  December  8,  1917;  January  19,  February  23, 
and  March  23,  1918. 
U.  S.  Bureau  of  education. 

List  of  references  on  European  war  and  education.     Typewritten,  1918. 
List  of  references  on  colleges  and  the  war.    Typewritten,  1918. 
U.  S.  Department  of  agriculture. 

List  of  references  on  women  and  the  war.    Typewritten,  1917  and  1918. 
U.  S.  Food  administration. 

Food  conservation,  bibliography,  8  p.,  February,  1918. 
U.  S.  Library  of  congress. 

List  of  references  on  woman's  work  in  the  European  war,  exclusive  of  Red 
Cross  activities,  15  p.,  typewritten,  January,  1918. 
U.  S.  War  college  division. 

Monthly  list  of  military  information.     Fort  Leavenworth,  Kans.,  1915-date. 
University  of  California. 

War-time   defense   work.     Prepared   by   graduate   seminar   in   social   eco- 
nomics.   Typewritten,  August-December,  1917. 
University  of  Wisconsin,  library  school. 

Women  and  the  war,  compiled  by  M.  M.  Scanlan,  June,  1917. 
Women's  educational  and  industrial  union. 

Women,   war-time   occupations   and   employment.     Compiled  by   Ethel   M. 
Johnson.     Special  libraries,  January  and  February,  1918. 

7 


WOMAN  IN  THE  WAR. 


WOMAN'S  COMMITTEE. 

Books  and  Pamphj.ets. 
Clarke,  Ida  Clyde. 

American  women  and  the  world  war.     N.  Y.     D.  Appleton  &  Co.     545  p. 
1918.     A  national  service  handbook  of  women's  work. 

A  description  of  the  departments  of  the  woman's  committee;  the  work  that 
Is  being  done  in  the  states  ;  the  war  relief  organizations ;  a  directory  of  women's 
organizations  doing  defense  worli. 
First  annual  report  of  the  woman's  committee,  council  of  national  defense. 

Washington,  Govt.,  April  21,  1918.     54  p. 
Organization    charts.     Woman's    committee.     Washington,    Govt.,    May,    1918, 
11  p. 

Articles  In  Periodicals. 

Chamberlain,  Mary. 

Women  and  ^^ar  work.    Survey,  v.  38,  p.  152-154,  May  19,  1917. 

The  worls  of   the   woman's   committee   and   other  organizations   with   especial 
reference  to  protection  of  women  in  industry. 
Clabkson,  Grosvenob  B. 

The  council  of  national  defense.     Its  purposes,   its  significance,   and   its 
contribution  to  the  great  war.     Scientific  American,  v.  118,  p.  306,  322, 
324,  326,  328,  330.     April  6,  1918.     See  p.  324.     Woman's  committee. 
What  the  council  of  national  defense  is,  and  what  it  has  done.    Scribner's 
magazine,  v.  62,  p.  182-191,  August,  1917. 
Field,  Louise  Maun  sell. 

Women  and  the  national  defense.     Bookman,  v,  46,  p.  556-560,  January, 
1918. 
Feanc,  Alissa. 

Women,  avant !     McCall's  magazine,  v.  45,  p.  8-9,  January,  1918. 
Pictures  of  the  members  of  the  woman's  committee. 
Generals  in  the  army  of  womanhood.     Milestones,  v.  1,  p.  10,  May,  1918. 

Pictures  of  the  members  of  the  woman's  committee. 
Hauser,  Elizabeth  J. 

The  ladies'  auxiliary.    Public,  v.  21,  p.  496-497,  April  20,  1918. 
Hungerfobd,   E. 

She  tackles  the  job.     Everybody's  magazine,  v.  34,  p.  426-437,  October, 
1917. 
News     Letter.     Issued  fortnightly  by  woman's  committee,  council  of  national 

defense,  Washington,  D.  C.     No.  1,  September  14,  1917. 
Packard,  Dorothy. 

When  women  can  help.    The  Efficiency  magazine,  v.  10.  p.  110-114,  Janu- 
ary, 1918. 

74217°— 18 2  9 


10  WOMAN   IN    THE   WAE. 

Shaw,  Dr.  Anna  Howakd. 

Union  of  women's  organizations  for  the  national  defense,  Philippine  re- 
view, V.  2,  p.  140-143,  December,  1917. 
Woman's  committtee. 

A  page  In  each  Issue  of  the  Ladies'  home  journal,  August,  1917-July,  1918. 
Spanglek,  Martha. 

American  womanhood  united.    New  west,  v.  9,  p.  55,  February,  1918. 
Tarbell,  Ida  M. 

Mobilizing  the  women.     Harper's  magazine,  v.  135,  p.  841-847,  November, 

1917. 
The  college  woman's  call  to  duty.     Journal  of  the  association  of  collegiate 

alumse,  v.  9,  p.  597-598,  May,  1918. 
Women  go  to  war.     Woman's  home  companion,  v.  44,  p.  17,  October,  1917. 

TOKSVIG,   SiGNE  K. 

Women  volunteers.    New  republic,  p.  18-20,  May  5,  1917. 

VANDEBLn>,    NaeCISSA    CoX. 

Woman's  work  in  our  war.     Harper's  bazaar,  p.  35,  102,  September,  1917. 
Tells  of  woman's  committee  and  other  organizations. 
War's  demand  on  woman's  ability.    Social  service  review,  v.  6,  p.  7-8,  October, 
1917. 

Discussion  of  organizations  in  the  United  States  which  are  doing  definite  work 
for   the   national  welfare. 
War  work  for  American  women.     World's  work,  v.  34,  p.  142-144,  June,  1917. 
How  they  can  serve  their  country  most  effectively. 

BEGISTRATION. 

books  and  pamphlets. 
Clarke,  Ida  Clyde. 

Registration.     (In  American  women,  and  the  world  war,  N.  Y.,  1918,  p. 
44-60.) 
Cooley,  Mrs.  Harlan  Ward. 

Registration  of  women  for  war-time  service.     April  2,  1918.     Pam.,  19  p. 
Woman's  committee  council  of  national  defense,  Illinois  division. 
Manual  for  registrars.    Woman's  committee,  council  of  national  defense,  Illinois 
division,  11  p. 

aeticles  in  periodicals. 
Ferris,    Hiu:.en    I. 

What  I,  a  girl,  can  do  for  my  country.    Ladies'  home  .lournal,  v.  35,  p.  35, 
February,  1918. 

This  shows  how  registration  can  help  girls  organized  and  unorganized. 
Nation  wide  registration  of  women  to  aid  in  w^ar  service.    Official  bulletin,  p.  7, 

June  26,  1917. 
Varnum,  Mina  Humphrey. 

Woman  power  an  unknown  quantity.    Good  health,  v,  54,  p.  194-195,  April, 

1918.     Registration  in  Michigan. 
Women  marshaled  to  serve  industry.     Michigan  manufacturer  and  finan- 
cial record,  v.  21,  p.  14-15,  April  13,  1918. 
Uncle  Sam  will  have  women  of  Michigan  solidly  behind  him.     Detroit  Sat- 
urday night,  April  27,  1918,  p.  6. 
The  need  and  method  of  registration  in  Michigan. 


WOMAN   IN    THE   WAR.  H 

FOOD  PRODUCTION— AGRICULTinaE. 

Pbance. 

aeticles  in  periodicals. 

The  French  a^cultural  labor  problem.     Great  Britain,  Board  of  agriculture 
journal,  v.  23,  p.  1-16,  April,  191G.     The  work  of  the  French  peasant 
women,  p.  1-12. 
Report  of  the  women's  mission  to  French  farms.     Great  Britain,  Board  of  ag- 
riculture journal,  v.  23,  p.  292-294,  June,  191G. 

This  is  a  report  of  a  committee  on  "  Women  and  farm  labor,"  which  shows  the 
remarkable  work  accomplished  by  the  French  women  on  farms. 

Geeat  Britain. 

books  and  pamphlets. 
Fraser,  Helen. 

The  woman's  land  army.     (In  Women  and  war  work.    N.  Y.,  1918,  p.  155- 
167.) 
Gbieg,  G.  a. 

Women's  work  on  the  land.    I^rondon,  1916,  48  p. 
KiRKALDY,  A.  W.,  ed. 

Women  workers  in  agriculture.     (In  Industry  and  finance — war  expedients 
and  reconstruction.     London,  1917.)      Summarized  in  U.   S.   Bureau  of 
labor  statistics,  Monthly  review,  p.  61-64,  May,  1918. 
McLaren,  Barbara. 

Miss  C.  E.  Matheson  and  the  village  land  workers.    Miss  Dorothy  Mathews 
and  Miss  Ursula  Winser.     (In  Women  of  the  war.    N.  Y.,  1918,  p.  2&-30, 
p.  114-117.) 
Stone,  Gilbert,  ed. 

The  land,     (/n  Women  war  workers.    N.  Y.,  1917,  p.  46-66.) 
Wabwick,  Frances  E.  M.  C.   (Countess  of). 

Woman's  war  work  on  the  land.     (In  A  woman  and  the  war.    N.  Y.,  1916.) 
Wolseley,  Viscountess. 

In  a  college  garden.    London,  John  Murray,  1916,  il.,  255  p. 

Tells  of  the  work  of  English  and  Canadian  women. 
Women  and  the  land.    London,  Chatto  &  Windus,  1916,  il.,  230  p. 

Suggestions   for   the  practical   farmer,  as  well  as  better   housing  and   living 
conditions. 
Women's  national   land   service   corps.     Interim   report   from   the  foundation 
of  the  corps  in  February,  1916,  to  September  30,  1916.    32  p.    London. 

aritcles  in  peiriodicals. 
Aglionby,  a.  Mary. 

Women's  w^ork  on  the  land  and  its  possibilities.     British  review,  v.  12,  p. 
357-366,  December,  1915. 
Agriculture  and  the  war. 

Great  Britain,  Board  of  agriculture  journal,  v.  23,  p.  92^940,  January, 
1917.     Women  laborers,  p.  936. 
Borlase,  W. 

Agricultural  demonstration  by  women  in  Cornwall.     Groat  Britain,  Board 
of  agriculture  journal,  v.  23,  p.  139-143.  IMay.  1916. 

Account  of  demonstrations  conducted  in  Cornwall   to  show   woman's  ability 
to  do  ordinary  farm  work. 


12  WOMAN    IN    THE    WAR. 

BOWLTNO,   R.   N. 

A  county  scheme  for  training  women  for  farm  work.     Great  Britain,  Board 
of  agriculture  journal,  v.  23,  p.  349-353,  July,  1916. 

Account  of  plans  laid  and  successfully  executed  for  breaking  down  prejudice 
In  Lincolnshire  against  women's  work  on   the  land.      Rules   for  the  stndenta  at 
the  training  station. 
British  women  entering  agi'iculture.     Survey,  v.  38,  p.  526-527,  September  15, 

1917. 
Bkownell,  E. 

Countryside    women    wanted.     Countryside   magazine,    v.    24,   p.    250-252, 
May,  1917. 
Colt,  Helen. 

New  opening  for  women  in  horticulture.     Women's  employment,  v.  17,  p.  4, 
July  6,  1917. 
Demeter's  daughters:  the  women  of  the  field.     Craftsman,  v.  31,  p.  116-122, 
November,  1916. 

Short  illustrated  article  showing  bow  the  women  of  Europe  have  responded 
to  the  call  of  their  coantries,  and  how  many  axe  working  in  the  fields  doing 
the  work  of  men. 
DE\'ENnoM,  Alice. 

Women  on  land.     Women's  employment,  v.  16,  p.  4,  January  21,  1916. 
Devon  women  volunteers  work  on  the  land.     Women's  employment,  v.  16,  p. 
4-5,  November  17,  19ia 

DLA.CK.    WlLLIAI^I. 

Scottish  v/omen  farm  workers.     Englishwoman,  p.  210-223,  March,  1915. 
Women    and    farm   work.     Englishwoman,    p.    1-2,    April,    1916.     Existing 

conditions  and  needs. 
Women   farm   workers  and   a   minimum   wage.     Englishwoman,   p.   90-95, 
June,  1917. 
Drilling  the  land  army.     The  women  at  work.     Milking  on  dummy  cows.     The 

times,  London,  p.  3,  March  28,  1917. 
Deuckeb,  Amy  J. 

The  new  farm  laborer.     Englishwoman,  p.  49-56,  July,  1916. 

Amusing  account  of  the  experience  of  a  vlfilting  hanrester  organizer  ©f  the 
women's  defense  relief  corps. 
Emerson,  A.  N. 

Women  as  cooperative  farmers.     Women's  employment,  v.  14,  p.  4,  Novem- 
ber 6,  1914. 
Employment  of  women  on  the  land.     Great  Britain,  Board  of  Agriculture  jour- 
nal, v.  23,  p.  143-145,  May,  1916. 

General  discussion  of  the  use  of  women  cm  the  land. 
FoEBES,  EiLioH  Hay. 

The  way  in  which  women  can  assist  agriculture  and  the  increased  produc- 
tion of  food  during  the  war.  Great  Britain,  Board  of  agriculture  jour- 
nal, V.  22,  p.  929-931,  January,  1916. 

A  Shropshire  school  girl's  appeal  to  the  women  of  England  to  do  their  ntmost 
to  aid  in  the  production  of  food. 
Fruit  farming  for  women.     Women's  employment,  v.  17,  p.  3,  February  2,  1917. 
Fruit  growing  as  an  employment  for  women.     Women's  employment,  v.  17,  p.  4, 

February  10,  1917. 
Hacking,  Thomas. 

Work  of  the  woman's  legion  in  Ruthland.  Great  Britain,  Board  of  agri- 
culture journal,  v.  23,  p.  124.5-12-10,  March,  1917. 

Shows   how  the   work   of  women   in   agriculture   has   been   systematically   •!> 
ganlzed  in  England. 


WOMAN    IN    THE   WAIL  13 

Haedcastle,  F.  E. 

Dairy  work  for  women.     Women's  employment,  v.  15,  p.  4-5,  March  19,  1015. 
Qualifications  and  training. 
Instruction  in  light  farming  worl^  and  milking  for  women  and  children.     Great 
Britain,  Board  of  agriculture  journal,  v.  23,  p.  264-271,  June,  1916. 

A  summary  of  the  training  afforded  women  and  children  in  farm  work  in  a 
number  of  counties  of  England  and  Wales. 
Land  army:  14,000  women   wanted;   new  conditions  in  the  land  army.     The 
Times   (London),  p.  3,  February  6,  1918.  ♦ 

Life  in  the  land  army.     Food  production  girls  at  work  and  play.     The  Times 
(London),  p.  9,  col.  5,  February  14,  1918. 

Mention  of  the  varieties  of  farm  work   undertaken   by   women   and   notice  of 
their  magazine,  The  landswoman. 
Lincolnshire  creche  to  release  women  for  farm  work.     Great  Britain,  Board  of 
agriculture  journal,  v.  23,  p.  145-147,  May,  1916. 

Account  of  a  day  nursery  conducted  under  the  supervision  of  a  nurse,   the 
purpose  of  which  is  to  release  the  mothers  for  work  on  the  land. 
Mackenzie,  Cameron. 

Putting  England's  acres  to  work.     Country  gentleman,  v.  83,  p.  14r-15,  37, 
February  2,  1918. 

Contains  an  account  of  the  woman's  land  army. 
England's  farmerettes.    Country  gentleman,  il.,  v.  83,  p.  6-8,  ]\Iarch  2,  1918. 
Same   number:   With   the   farm   girls   in  Britain's   fields,        (Pictorial) 
p.  25. 
Maetineau,  Alice. 

Assured   future   for   women   on   the   land.      Englishwoman,    August,   1915, 
p.  128-134. 

Demand  for  women  to  replace  men  in  market  gardening,  poultry  raising. 
Night   farming  by   women   in   England.     Scientific   American,   v.    118,   p.    341, 

April  13,  1918. 
Peet,  J.  O. 

Successful  employment  of  women  on  farms.    Great  Britain,  Board  of  agri- 
culture journal,  v.  23,  p.  1249-1252,  March,  1917. 

This  article  tells  of  the  success  the  women  of  England  have  made  in   their 
work  on  farms. 
Pott,  Gladys. 

Woman  in  agriculture.    Women's  industrial  news,  p.  27-35,  July,  1916. 

Conditions  and  openings  in  England  for  war  service  of  women  on  the  land. 
Rawson,  p.  E. 

Fruit  farming  for  women.     Englishwoman,  p.  227-231,  September,  1915. 
Need  for  women  on  the  farms. 
Scottteh  women  on  the  land.    Women's  employment,  v.  16,  p.  6,  October  6,  1916. 
Stapleton,  Doris  W. 

Women   in   the   root   fields   in   Cardiganshire.      Great   Britain,    Board    of 
agriculture  journal,  v.  23,  p.  462-465,  August,  1916. 

Description  of  successful  work  of  gangs  of  women  under  the  direction  of  the 
writer,  using  hoes  In  the  root  fields. 
Successful   employment  of  women   in   agriculture.     Great   Britain,    Board   of 
agriculture  journal,  v.  22,  p.  1006-1007,  January,  1916,  illus. 

Several  definite  Instances  given  of  the  successful  employment  of  women  on 
farms. 
Great  Britain,   Board  of  agriculture  journal,   v.   23,   p.   492-493,   August, 
1916. 

Instance  In  which  the  employment  of  two  women — dressmaker  and  a   milli- 
ner— in  farm  work  was  highly  successful. 


14  WOMAN   IN    THE    WAB. 

Successful  employment  of  women  on  the  land.     Great  Britain,  Board  of  agri- 
culture journal,  v.  23,  p.  75-76,  April,  1916. 

Instances  given  of  the  successful  employment  of  women  on  the  land. 
Testing  women  farm  workers.     Great  Britain,  Board  of  agriculture  journal,  r. 

24,  p.  881-883,  November,  1917. 
Training  women  for  the  land  in  England.    World's  work,  London,  v.  27,  p.  328, 

March,  1916. 
Training  of  women  in  agriculture.     Labour  gazette,  Great  Britain,  Board  of 
*  trade,  p.  446,  December,  1916. 

Training  women  for  farm  work — Stapleford  training  hostel,  Hertford.     Great 
Britain,  Board  of  agriculture  journal,  December,  1916,  v.  23,  p.  881. 

Short  account  of  the  training  center  for  women  at  Stapleford.     Course  lasts 
six  weeks.     Students  sign  an  agreement  to  work  for  six  months  in  the  country. 
Scheme  has  proved  very  successful. 
A  visit  to  the  women  cooperative  farmers,  Heathfield.     Women's  employment, 

V.  17,  p.  4,  November  2,  1917. 
Volunteer  labor  for  the  land.     Spectator,  v.  118,  p.  96-97,  June  27,  1917. 
WiLiciNS,  Mrs.  Roland. 

The  training  and  employment  of  educated  women  in  horticulture  and  agri- 
culture.    W^estminster,  1916. 

This  is  the  result  of  an  inquiry  undertaken  for  the  purpose  of  ascertaining 
what  openings  exist  for  educated  women  in  agriculture  and  horticulture. 
The    work    of   educated    women    in    horticulture    and    agriculture.     Great 
Britain,  Board  of  agriculture  journal,  v.  22,  p.  554-569,  61&-642,   Sep- 
tember-October, 1915. 

WiNTOUE,   W.   R. 

Training  women  for  farm  work  in  Notts.     Great  Britain,  Board  of  agri- 
culture journal,  v.  23,  p.  879-881,  December,  1916. 

Outlines  the  work  of  two  training  centers  for  women  learning  agriculture  in 
Nottinghamshire,  England. 
WoLSELEY,  Viscountess. 

Agricultural  work.     Women's  work  on  the  land.     Nineteenth  century,  r. 
79,  p.  126-138,  January,  1916. 
A  woman  farm  worker  in  Lakeland.     (Eng.)     Spectator,  p.  673-674,  Decem- 
ber 8,  1917. 

The  personal  experience  of  a  woman  worker  on  land. 
Women  foresters.     A  new  opening  for  girls.     Women's  employment,  v.  16,  p.  5, 

■September,  1916. 
Women  in  agriculture.    Women's  industrial  news,  July,  1916. 
Women  on  the  land.     Women's  employment,  v.  16,  p.  4-5,  January  21,  1916; 

v.  16,  p.  6,  October  6,  1916 ;  v.  17,  p.  4,  November  2,  1917. 
Women  on  the  land  in  Ireland.     Women's  employment,  v.  17,  p.  6,  February  16, 

1917. 
Women  recruits  for  work  on  farms  in  Great  Britain.     U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor 
statistics,  Monthly  review,  p.  28-31,  July,  1917. 

Tells  of  the  work  of  the  women's  national  land  serylce  corps. 
Women's  war  work.    War  office,  1916. 

Contains  detailed  list  of  women's  employment,  including  agriculture. 
Women's  work  in  agriculture  in  peace  and  war.    Great  Britain,  Board  of  agri- 
culture journal,  v.  22,  p.  859-866,  December,  1915. 
Women  workers  on  the  farm.     International  review  of  agricultural  economics, 
V.  76,  p.  106-108,  April,  1917. 

Account  of  a  practical  test  of  efficiency  for  women  farm  workers. 
Women's  institutes.     Scottish  journal  of  agriculture,  v.  1,  p.  46-51,  1918. 
Women's  work   in   agriculture.     Scottish  journal  of  agriculture,  v.  1,  no.   1, 
p.  60-61,  1918. 


WOMAN   IN    THE   WAB,  15 

Work  of  women  on  the  land.  Great  Britain,  Board  of  agriculture  journal,  v. 
23,  p.  876-879,  December,  1916.  See  also  the  following  issue:  p.  462, 
August. 

A  number  of  instances  are  cited  here  which  show  the  excellent  work  done  by 
the  British  women  on  farms. 
Worli   of  women's   county   agricultural   committee.     Great   Britain,    Board   of 
trade,  Labour  gazette,  p.  447-448,  December,  1916;  p.  43,  February,  1916. 

United  States. 
books  and  pamphlets. 

Blatch,  Harriot  Stanton. 

A  land  army.     (In  Mobilizing  woman  power,  N.  Y.,  1918.     p.  164-175.) 
Garden  Club  of  America. 

Report  and  plans  of  the  war  work  council. 

Giving  unit   plan   for   agricultural  workers   with   some  account  of  what  has 
been  done  in  New  York  and  England.     Bulletin  of  The  Club,  p.  4-11,  January, 
1918. 
Mayor's  Committee  of  Women  on  National  Defense. 

Report  of  the  committee  on  agriculture.    May-December,  1917,  N.  Y.    The 
Committee. 
United  States  Department  of  Agriculture. 

Farm  work  of  women  in  war  time,  by  E.  INIerritt.     An  address  before 
national   conference   of  state  leaders  of  home  demonstration  work  in 
northern  and  western  states.     States  relations  service,  1917. 
Women  as  farm  laborers.     States  relations  service,  1917. 
Women  on  the  farm.     An  address  before  the  woman's  committee  of  the 
council  of  national  defense,  May  13,  1918,  in  Washington,  D.  C,  by  Clar- 
ence  Ousley. 
Woman's  Land  Army  of  America. 

How  to  organize  the  woman's  land  army  in  the  counties.    The  Land  army, 

N.  Y.,  March,  1918.     (7  p.) 
How  to  equip  a  woman's  land  army  camp.     The  Land  army,  N.  Y.,  1918. 

(10  p.) 
Organization   of  agricultural  units.     The  Land   army,  N.   Y..   February, 

1918.      (8  p.) 
Woman's  agricultural  camp,   Bedford,  N.   Y.     First  annual  report  1917. 

(13  p.) 
Women  on  the  land.    The  Land  army,  N.  Y.,  1918. 
Young  Women's  Christian  Association. 

The  girl  on  the  land.     Land  service  committee  of  the  war  work  council. 
May,  1918.     (6  p.) 

abticles  in  periodicals. 

Back  to  the  farm.    Illustrated  world,  v.  28,  p.  613,  December,  1917.    School  for 

horticulture  at  Ambler,  Pa. 
Carter,  Louise. 

A  school  of  horticulture  for  women.     Journal  of  association  of  collegiate 

alumnae,  v.  11,  p.  501-506,  April,  1918. 
COCKRELL,  T.  D.  A. 

War  work  of  college  women  in  the  west.    School  and  society,  v.  6,  p.  QQ9- 
705. 


16  WOMAN   IN    THE   WAK. 

Da^-enport,  E. 

Shall  the  farmer's  wife  pitch  hay?     Country  gentleman,  v.  S3,  p.  15,  Feb. 
ruary  23,  191S. 

Only  as  the  very  last  resort  in  this  war  for  human  rights. 
Dean,  R. 

Woman's  land  army  of  America.    Country  life,  v.  33,  p.  44-45,  March,  1918. 
Girl  laborers  on  small  farms  at  $2  a  day.    Woman's  land  army  starts  its  spring 
drive.    New  York  times,  February  3,  1918. 

GlLUEESLKEVE,  V.  C. 

Women  farm  Avorkers.    New  republic,  v.  12,  p.  132-134,  September,  1917. 
Hakmon,  D. 

Is  the  woman  needed  on  the  farm?     Ladies'  home  journal,  v.  35,  p.  105, 
May,  1918. 
How  to  form   a  group  of  woman  workers.     Ladies'   home  journal,   v.  35,  p. 

105,  May,  1918. 
Laut,  a.  C. 

Training  recruits  for  the  farm  game.     Country  gentleman,  v.  83,  p.  1670- 
1671,  November  3,  1917. 

LOINES,  ElMA. 

A  course  in  estate  management  for  women  in  war  time.    New  country  life, 

V.  34,  p.  66-^7,  May,  1918 ;  p.  61-63,  June,  1918. 
Parker,  Grace, 

The  woman  power  of  the  nation.    The  independent,  p.  305-306,  February 

19,  1917. 
Pickett,  John  E. 

The  farm  labor  round-up.    Country  gentleman,  v.  83,  p.  3^,  30,  32,  April  6, 

1918. . 
A  Plattsburg  for  the  land  army.    Woman  citizen,  v.  3,  p.  135,  July  13,  1918. 
Some  things  our  country  women  are  thinking  and  doing  in  national  service. 

Country  gentleman,  v.  82,  p.  1157,  July  14,  1917. 
To  mobilize  women  for  work  on  farms.     Miss  Wileman  who  organized  British 

and  Canadian  women  labor  begins  task  here.     New  York  times,  Feb.  3, 

1918. 
Woman's  land  army  recruits  for  foreign  trenches.    New  York  times,  part  4,  p. 

1,  March  24,  1918. 
Woman's  land  army  for  peace  times.     Survey,  v.  40,  p.  433-434,  July  13,  1918. 
SricER,  Anne  Higginson. 

Hoeing  Uncle  Sam's  row ;  the  woman's  land  army  in  the  making.    Life  and 

labor,  V.  7,  p.  133-136,  July,  1918. 

FOOD    ADMINISTRATION. 

General  Food  Situation. 
books  and  pamphlets. 

Kellogg  and  Tatloe. 

The  food  situation  of  the  western  allies  and  the  United  States.     (In  The 
food  problem,  p.  3-18.) 
Thompson,  Warren  S. 

Population,  a  study  of  Malthusianism.    Columbia  university  press,  1915. 

articles  in  periodicals. 
Cutler,  Burwell  S. 

International  rationing.     (In  The  world's  food.     The  annals,  v.  74,  p.  34, 
November,  1917.) 


WOMAN   IN   THE   WAB.  17 

Kellogg,  Vernon. 

Patriotism  and  food.     Atlantic  monthly,  v.  120,  p.  577,  November,  1917. 

ROOEBACK,    G.    B. 

The  world's  food  supply.     {In  The  world's  food.    The  annals,  v.  74,  p.  1, 

November,  1917.) 
Webb,  Sidney. 

World  famine  into  which  we  are  hurrying.    Contemporary  review,  v.  112, 

p.  380,  October,  1917. 
World  inventory  of  food   supply.     Survey,  v.  38,  p.  555,   September  22, 

1917. 

Central  Eubopb. 
aeticles  in  periodicals, 

ACKEEMAN,    CaEL  W. 

Black  sheep  among  the  neutrals.     Saturday  evening  post,  v.  190,  p.  7,  July 
28,  1917. 
Ashley,  W.  J. 

Germany's  resources  under  the  blockade.     Atlantic  monthly,  v.  115,  p.  817, 
June,  1915. 
Berlin's  meatless  day.     Literary  digest,  v.  52,  p.  35,  January  1,  1916. 
Dawson,  Albert  K. 

Economic  conditions  in  Germany.    Scientific  American,  v.  116,  p.  102,  .Janu- 
ary 27,  1917. 
England's  blockade  a  "failure."    Literary  digest,  v.  52,  p.  428,  February  19, 

1916. 
Food  supply  in  Central  Europe.     Bulletin  242,  U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics. 

A  survey  covering  the  period  January  1  to  October  31,  1917. 
Food  supply  of  the  German  people.     Scientific  American  supplement,   v.   81, 

p.  303,  May  6,  1916. 
Germany  after  three  years  of  war.     N.  Y.  times  current  history,  v.  7,  pt.  1, 

p.  155,  October,  1917. 
Germany's  economic  position.     Living  age,  v.  294,  p.  764,  September  22,  1917. 
Gbiffith,  Sanfoed. 

Germany's  food  problems.     Outlook,  v.  114,  p.  265,  October  4,  1916. 
Kennedy,  J.  M. 

War  conditions  in  Austria-Hungary.     Contemporary'  review,  v.  110,  p.  206, 
August,  1916. 
MacElms,  Roy  S. 

Learning  from  the  enemy.    Independent,  v.  91,  p.  95,  July  21,  1917. 
Maylandee,  Alfeed,  comp. 

Food  situation  in  Germany,  November  1,  1917,  to  January  31,  1918.     U.  S. 
Bureau  of  labor  statistics,  Monthly  review,  p.  45-53,  May,  1918. 
Stocks,  Mary. 

The  meat  problem  in  Germany.     Economic  journal,  v.  26,  p.  168.  .Tune,  1916. 
The  truth  about  Germany.     Living  age,  v.  293,  p.  195,  April  28,  1917. 

France. 

articles  in  periodicals. 

Gide,  Charles. 

The  provisioning  of  France  and  the  measures  taken  by  the  Government  to 
that  end.     Economic  journal,  v.  26,  p.  35,  March,  1916. 

74217°— 18 3 


18  WOMAN   IN    THE   WAIL 

MoND,  Fbancois. 

Food  for  France  and  its  public  control.     (In  The  world's  food.     The  an- 
nals, V.  74,  p.  84,  November,  1917.) 
Sellabs,  Edith. 

The  French  solution  of  the  bread  problem.    Nineteenth  century  and  after, 
V.  81,  p.  1028,  May,  1917. 

Gkeat  Britain. 

pamphlet. 

Wood,  T.  B. 

National  food  supply  in  peace  and  war.    Cambridge  university  press. 

aeticles  in  pebiodicals. 

Blyth,  James  B. 

Suggestions  for  doubling  the  home  production  of  food.     Nineteenth  cen- 
tury and  after,  v.  81,  p.  748,  April,  1917. 
Corn  production.    New  statesman,  v.  9,  p.  366,  July  21,  1917. 
England's  food.    Literary  digest,  v.  52,  p.  1626,  June  3,  1916. 

HlI.TON,  J. 

The  foundations  of  food  policy.    Edinburgh  review,  v.  226,  p.  28,  July,  1917. 
Pellen,  Arthur. 

The  food  problem  of  Great  Britain,  the  shipping  problem  of  the  world. 
(In  The  world's  food.    The  annals,  v.  74,  p.  91,  November,  1917.) 
Young,  Eilson. 

Ravens  that  feed  us.    Living  age,  v.  271>  p.  56,  October  7,  1911. 

United  States. 
aeticles  in  periodicals. 

COLVn.LE,   F.    Y. 

War,  patriotism  and  the  food  supply.     National  geographic  magazine,  v. 
31,  p.  254,  March,  1917. 
Davenport,  E. 

Mobilization  for  food  production.     Saturday  evening  post,   v.  189,  p.  24, 
May  12,  1917. 
Food  and  the  future.    New  republic,  v.  11,  p.  348,  July  28,  1917. 
Hoe  and  the  bayonet.    Outlook,  v.  115,  p.  690,  April  18,  1917. 
Houston,  David  F. 

Big  crops  V.  big  guns.     Saturday  evening  post,  v.  189,  p.  11,  May  12.  1017. 
Larson,  C.  W. 

Food  and  the  war.    Columbia  university  quarterly,  v.  19,  p.  201,  June,  1917. 
Laut,  a.  C. 

Bread  bullets,  the  army  behind  the  hoe.     Saturday  evening  post,  v.  189,  p. 
14,  June  2,  1917. 
Mitchell,  J.  B. 

Fighting  it  out  in  the  food  trenches.    Forum,  v.  58,  p.  323,  September,  1917. 
Our  food  problem.     New  republic,  v.  11,  p.  290,  July  14,  1917. 
Our  waning  food  supply.     Scientific  American,  v.  116,  p.  84,  January  20,  1917. 
Quick,  Herbert. 

Wherewithal  shall  we  be  fed.     Saturday  evening  post,  v.  189,  p.  12,  May  5, 
1917. 
Specter  of  famine  overshadowing  the  world.     Current  opinion,  v.  62,  p.  410, 
June,  1917. 


WOMAN   IN    THE   WAR,  19 

U.  S.  Food  administbation. 

Food,  news  notes  for  public  libraries.     No.  1,  October,  1917. 

Published  monthly.     Lists  articles  in  current  periodicals  on  food  conservation. 

WOMEN    IN    INDUSTRY. 

France. 

books  and  pamphlets, 

Atherton,  Geetrtjde. 

Replacement.     (In  The  living  present,  N.  Y.,  p.  24-33.) 
Combat,  Ed. 

Le  travail  des  femmes  a  domicile;  textes  officials  avec  commentaire  expli- 
catif  et  etud  generale  sur  les  salaires  feminins.     Paris   (etc)     Berger, 
Levrault,  1916,  85  p.     Legislation  de  guerre.  1914-1916. 
Hamp,  Pierre. 

La  France,  pays  ouvrier.    Paris,  Nouvelle  revue  frangaise,  1916. 
Lavendau,  Henri. 

La   famille  frangaise.     Paris,   Perrin   et   cie,   1917.    La   femme   apres  la 
guerre,  p.  169-179. 
Jones,  J.  E. 

Post  war  industrial  status  of  women  in  France.     3  p.  Lyon.     Training, 
wages,  hours,  character  of  work,  industrial  conditions  in  Lyon,  France. 
Masson,  Frederic. 

Les  femmes  et  la  guerre  de  1914.    Paris,  Bloud  &  Gay,  1915,  32  p.     (Pages 
actuelles,  1914-1915,  no.  2.) 
Replacement  of  men  by  women  in  French  industries;   and  establishment  of 
trade  schools  for  French  munition  workers.     Monthly  review.  Bureau  of 
labor  statistics,  p.  42-44,  October,  1917. 

Data  taken   from   Bulletin  de  ministere  du  travail  et  de  la  prevoyance  so- 
ciale,   April-May,    1917. 
Zey,  Louise. 

Les  petites  industries  feminines.  (Societe  d'encouragement  pour  Tindus- 
trie  nationale.     Bui.  Paris,  1914,  Annes  113,  p.  565-587,  v.  121.)     Illus. 

ARTICUES    in   periodicals. 

Employment  of  women  in  France.     Journal  of  American  society  of  mechanical 

engineers,    v.  38,  p.  1044-1045,  December,  1916. 
Hamp,  Pierre. 

How  French  women  are  saving  the  industries  of  their  own  land.     Touch- 
stone, p.  524-525,  September,  1917. 
Hanotaux,  Gabriel. 

The  work  of  the  women.     N.  Y.  times  current  history,  v.  4,  p.  358-359, 
May,  1916. 
JoLY,  Henri. 

La  question  du  travail  des  femmes;  ses  perspectives  nouvelles.  (Society 
d'encouragement  pour  I'industrie  nationale.  Bui.  Paris,  1917,  Tome  127, 
p.  281-296.) 

RiCHAND,    G. 

A  propos  du  salaire  feminin.     (R.  Polit.  et  Litt,  p.  589-591,  September  29, 
1917.) 
War  and  the  French  working  women.     Life  and  labor,  v.  7,  p.  149-150,  152, 
July,  1918. 


20  WOMAN   IN    THE   WAIL 

Warner,  H.  Arthur. 

French  women  in  industry.    New  west,  v.  9,  p.  16,  February,  1918. 
A  brief  tribute  to  French  women. 
Wells,  Martin. 

Women  workers  of  France.     Scientific  American,  v.  114,  p.  238-239,  March 
4,  1916. 

New  duties  that  women  are  assuming?  to  release  men  needed  at  the  front. 
Women  as  the  source  of  the  Frenchman's  strength  in  the  test  of  war.     Current 

opinion,  v.  61,  p.  113-114,  August,  1916. 
Work  of  women  in  France  and  allied  countries.     Revue  des  deux  mondes,  p. 

175-204,  September  1,  1916. 
Yates,  Margarite. 

French  women  in  war  time.     Englishwoman,  p.  122-130,  November,  1917. 
Attitude  toward  employment  before  and  during  the  war. 
Zey,  L. 

Les  femmes  et  la  guerre.     Revue  des  deux  mondes,  6  per.,  v.  35,  p.  175- 
204,  September  1,  1916. 

Germany. 

BOOKS    AND    pamphlets. 

JuNGER,  Karl,  ed. 

Deutschlands  frauen  und  Deutschlands  krieg,  ein  rat-,  tat-  und  trost  buch; 
gestamelte  blatter  ous  frauenhand,  Stuttgart,  R.  Lutz,  196  p.,  1916. 

ARTICIJES    IN    PERIODICALS. 
BlANQUIS,   G. 

Les  femmes  allemandes  at  la  guerre.     Revue  des  deux  mondes,  6  p6r.,  y. 
38,  p.  182,  204,  March  1,  1917. 
Employment   of  women   in   foundries   in    Germany.     U.    S.    Bureau   of   labor 

statistics.  Monthly  review,  p.  219-22,  April,  1918. 
The  ladies !     God  bless  them.     Sugar,  v.  18,  p.  121,  March,  1916. 

A  course  for  women  at  the  institute  for  the  sugar  industry  at  Herzfeld  in 
Germany. 
Levt,  Rathenau  Josephine. 

Krieg  und  industrielle  frauenarbeit.     Technik  und  wlrtschaft,  p.  173-178, 
May,  1915. 
Mobilization  of  German  women.     Independent,  p.  248-9,  November  3,  1917. 
A   short  description   of  what  girls   do  in   the   transport  service. 

WOLTOK,    M. 

Wei  Chen   beruf  wahit  die  kriegswitwe?    Die  wichtigste   lebensfrage   der 
heutigen  zeit  fiir  alle  erwerbenden  frauen.    Berlin,  Eberhard  u.  Restorfif 
Verlag,  29  p.,  1915. 
Women's  labor  in  Germany  during  the  war.     Great  Britain,  Board  of  trade. 
Labour  gazette,  p.  48,  February,  1917. 

Figures  showing  growth  of  female  employment. 
Work  of  the  board  of  trade  local  advisory  committee  upon  women's  war  em- 
ployment.   Great  Britain,  Board  of  trade,  Labour  gazette,  p.  403,  Novem- 
ber, 1916. 

Steps   taken   by   the   board   of  trade  to   utilize   the   full   reserve   of   women's 
labor.     Measures  for  replacing  men  by  women  in  industry  in  Germany. 
Zepler,  Wally. 

Krieg  und   frauenberufs-arbeit.      Sozialistische   monatshefte,   Heft   22,   p. 
1134^1137,  November  4,  1915. 


WOMAN   IN   THE   WAB.  21 

Geeat  Britain. 

books  and  pamphlets. 
Anderson  (Miss). 

Women  and  girls  in  industry.     (In  Annual  report  Great  Britain,  Chief  in- 
spector of  factories  and  workshops,  p.  32-54,  1914. ) 
Effect  of  the  second  year  of  war  on  industrial  employment  of  women  and 

girls.     (In  Annual  report,  p.  13-15,  1915.) 
Effect  of  the  third  year  of  war  on  industrial  employment  of  women  and 
girls.     (In  Annual  report,  p.  5-10,  1916.) 
Andrews,  Irene  Osgood. 

Economic  effects  of  the  war  upon  women  and  children  in  Great  Britain. 
N.  Y.,  Oxford  university  press.  190  p.,  1918. 

Contains  an  account  of  women's  and  children's  work  before  and  during  the 
war,  the  trade  unions,  wages,  hours  of  work,  welfare  work,  and  effects  of  war 
on   women   and   children. 
Bell,  Hamilton. 

British  women  in  the  war.    N.  Y.,  G.  Arnold  Shaw,  8  p.,  1917. 

Gives  the  number  of  women  workers  in  Great  Britain  and  a  short  descrip- 
tion of  the  waacs. 
BoNDFiELD,  Margaret. 

Position  of  women  in  industry.     {In  Hope  for  society  by  Lucy  Gardner, 

London. ) 
The  future  of  women  in  industry.     Labour  year  book,  1916. 
Central  committee  on  women's  employment.     Interim  report.   Great   Britain. 
London,  Govt.,  42  p.,  1915. 

Contains  some  interesting  suggestions  on  the  promotion  of  new  openings  for 
permanent  employment  of  women. 
Chitechill  (Jennie  Jerome),  Lady  Randolph,  ed. 

Women's  war  work.    London,  G.  Arthur  Pearson  (Ltd.),  159  p.,  1916. 
Cole,  G.  D.  H. 

Women  and  the  war.     (In  Labour  in  war  time,  London,  p.  227-253,  1915.) 
Collection  of  pamphlets  on  subject  of  women  in  industry  for  enlisted  men. 
No.  1,  1916.    Great  Britain  Home  office  and  Board  of  trade. 

Information  as  to  processes  in  which,  and  the  methods  by  which,  temporary 
substitution    of  women   for   enlisted   men   is  already   being   successfully   carried 
out  in  the  trades. 
Commission  of  inquiry  into  industrial  unrest.    Reports,  Great  Britain,  London, 
Govt.,  1917. 

Conditions  of  women's  work  given  as  one  of  the  causes  of  industrial  unrest. 
Summarized  in  Monthly  review,  U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics,  p.  33-38,  Octo- 
ber, 1917. 
Employment  of  women.     Memo.  4  of  Health  of  munition  workers  committee. 
Summary  in  Monthly  review  of  U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics,  p.  74-76, 
June,  1916.     Juvenile  employment.     Memo.  13,  S  p.,  August,  1916.     Sum- 
marized in  Monthly  review,  p.  92-97,  December,  1916. 
Employment  of  women  and  juveniles  in  Great  Britain  during  the  war.     Bul- 
letin no.  223,  U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics,  121  p.,  April,  1917. 

Made   up   of   reprints   of  ofGcial    and   quasi-official    documents   giving   the   ex- 
periences of  Great   Britain  and   other   foreign   countries  in   dealing  with   labor 
conditions   resulting   from   the   war.      Summarized   in   Monthly   review,   p.   878- 
879,  June,  1917. 
Eraser,  Helen. 

Women  and  war  work.    N.  Y.,  G.  Arnold  Shaw,  308  p.,  1918. 

An  account  of  organization  and  work  of  the  women  of  Enj[land  written  for 
American  women,  with  an  introduction  by  Pres.  H.  H.  MacCracken  of  Vassar 
College 


22  WOMAN   IN   THE   WAB. 

Great  Britain,  Board  of  agriculture  and  fisheries,  Committee  on  land  settle- 
ment for  sailors  and  soldiers.  Final  report.  London,  Eyre  &  Spottis- 
woode,  1916,  3  v.  (Parliament.  Papers  by  Command.  Cd.  8183,  8277, 
8347.)     See  index,  v.  3,  under  Women. 

Great  Britain  Board  of  trade.  Three  reports  on  state  of  employment  in  the 
United  Kingdom.     September,  1914,  October,  1914,  February,  1915. 

HUTCHINS,  B.  L. 

Women  in  modern  industry.     London,  Bell,  1915.     See  p.  239-265  for  the 
effects  of  the  war  on  the  employment  of  women  in  Great  Britain. 
Includes  section  on  constructuve  measures. 
KiBKALDY,  Adam  W.,  ed. 

Credit,  industry,  and  the  war,  being  reports  and  other  matter  presented  to 
the  section  of  economic  science  and  statistics  of  the  British  Association 
lor  the  advancement  of  science.     London,  New  York,  Sir  I.  Pitnam  & 
sons,  1916,  268  p.    Contains  a  report  on  the  employment  of  women. 
Labour,  finance,  and  the  war,  being  the  results  of  inquiries,  arranged  by 
the  section  of  economic  science  and  statistics  of  the  British  Association 
for  the   advancement  of   science,    during  the   years   1915-1916.     344   p. 
Loud.,  Pitnam,  1916.     Replacement  of  men  by  w^omen  in  industry  during 
the  war,  p.  58-213.     Summary  in  Monthly  review  U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor 
statistics,  March,  1917. 
Memorandum  for  the  guidance  of  local  committees,  issued  by  advisory  com- 
mittee on  women's  war  employment  (industrial).    4  p.    London,  March, 
1916.     Statistics  on  war  employment,  organization  of  the  demand  for 
women's  labor,  organization  of  the  supply  of  women's  labor. 
Paekee,  Grace. 

How  the  resources  of  women  are  being  used  in  England's  crisis.       N.  Y., 
National  league  for  women's  service,  1917. 
Report  of  the   chief  inspector   of  factories   and   workshops   for   1916.     10   p. 

London,  1917.     Conditions  of  M^omen's  employment  in  war  time. 
Report  on  the  increased  employment  of  women  during  the  war  with  statistics 
relating  to  July,  1916.    28  p.    Great  Britain. 

Takes    up    increased    employment    of    women    and    replacement    of    men    by 
women,   and   includes   account   for   the   principal   industries   other   than   manu- 
facturers  of   munition. 
Stone,  Gilbeet,  ed.     Introduction  by  Lady  Jellicoe. 
Women  w^ar  workers.     N.  Y.,  T.  Y.  Crowell,  1917. 

Accounts    contributed    by    representative    workers    In    the    more    important 
branches    of   war   employment.     Chapters    ot    personal    experience    in    munition 
work,  on  the  land,  postwomen,  banking,  driving  delivery  wagon,  nursing  at  the 
French  front,  the  V.  A.  D.  nurse,  the  comforteers,  welfare  work  and  the  women 
of  Paris  during  the  German  advance.     A  directory  and  brief  summary  of  the 
work  of  every   important   v.-ar   organization   for   women. 
Substitution  of  women  for  men.    Tabular  reports  by  H.  M.  inspectors  of  factories, 
showing  the  present  position  in  industries  other  than  munitions  industries. 
Great  Britain  Factory  inspection,  216  p.,  January,  1917.     The  extent  to 
which  substitution  has  been  carried  to  the  end  of  1916  and  replacement 
value. 
Training  of  women  for  factory  work.     Report  of  the  Ontario  commission  on 
unemployment,  p.  172,  1916. 

Gives    the   results   of   the   questioning   of   a    number   of   Canadian    manufac- 
turers as  to  what  they  considered  the  proper  training. 
UsBOBNE,  Mrs.  H.  M.,  comp. 

Woman's  work  in  war  time:  a  handbook  of  employments.    London,  Werner 
Laurie,  174  p.,  1917.    Preface  by  Lord  Northcliffe. 


WOMAN   IN   THE   WAE.  23 

Women's  war  work  in  maintaining  the  industries  and  export  trade  of  the 
United  Kingdom.  Information  officially  compiled  for  use  of  recruiting 
officers,  military  representatives  and  tribunals.  Issued  by  tbe  war  office, 
September,  1916.  London,  printed  under  authority  of  the  H.  M.  Sta- 
tioneFy  off.  by  the  Chiswick  Press,  1916.  94  p.,  illus.  Summarized  in 
the  Monthly  review,  U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics,  p.  88-92,  De- 
cember, 1916.  Detailed  list  of  processes  in  which  women  are  success- 
fully employed,  such  as  chemical  and  clothing  trades,  munitions,  food 
trades,  nonindustrial  occupations  and  agriculture.  See  p.  5-6,  81,  91, 
93  for  agencies  to  be  consulted  in  the  employment  of  women  in  Great 
Britain. 

articles  in  peeiodicals. 

Abbott,  Edith. 

War  and  women's  work  in  England.     Journal  of  political  economy,  v.  24, 

p.  641-678,  July,  1917. 

Takes  up  question  of  the  effects  of  war ;  unemployment ;  relief  work  ;  exten- 
sion   of    employment    of    women ;    working   conditions    in    cities    from    English 
reports. 
Addisox,  Christopher. 

Women's  work  and  mobile  labor.     British  workshops  and  the  war.     Lon- 
don, Unwin,  1917,  p.  35-37. 
Adler,  N. 

Women's  industry  after  the  war.    Living  age,  p.  207-213,  January  22,  1916. 
Contemporary  review,  December,  1915. 

Advocates  the  advisability  of  women  being  trained.     Gives  new  occupations 
open  to  them. 
AxEC-TwEEDiE,  Mrs. 

Martial  law  and  women.    English  review,  v.  24,  p.  159-167,  February,  1917. 
Military  rule  for  women  as  well  as  men  would  speed  up  the  war. 

Amy,  Lacey. 

England  in  arms;  women  and  the  war.    Canadian  magazine,  v.  49,  p.  3-10, 
May,  1917. 

Without  the  women  of  England  the  war  would  never  he  viou.     This  article 
verifies  this  statement  to  a  certain  extent  by  showing  the  splendid  work  done 
by  women  in  all  lines  of  work. 
ASHFORD,  E.  B. 

Women  in  distributive  trades;   displacement  study.     Women's  industrial 
news,  V.  20,  p.  9-14,  April,  1916. 

Discusses  some  of  the  new  employments  open  to   English  women   since  the 
war. 
Barker,  J.  E. 

How  to  find  two  million  war  workers.     Nineteenth  century,  v.  81,  p.  758- 
772,  April.  1917. 

Recommends  conscription  to  relieve  shortage  of  labor. 

BiLLiNGTON,  Mary  F. 

Woman's  share  in  the  war's  work.     London  quarterly  review,  v.  124,  p. 
70-83,  January,  1916.     Living  age,  v.  288,  p.  739-747,  March  18,  1916. 
Overland  monthly,  n.  v.  v.  07,  p.  485-492,  June.  1916. 
Blatch,  H.  S. 

English  and  French  women  and  the  war.    Outlook,  v.  113,  p.  483-490,  June 

28,  1916. 

Fitting  of  women  into  the  Industrial  scheme. 
BOSANQUET. 

Women  in  industry.     Economic  journal,  v.  26,  p.  209.  June,  1916. 
British  association.     Labor  after  the  war.     Employment  of  women.     Engineer, 
V.  120,  p.  292-293,  September  24,  1915. 


24  WOMAN   IN   THE   WAR. 

British  women  in  war  service.    Current  history  magazine,  v.  6,  p.  351-352,  May, 
1917. 

Gives   the   contents   of   a   statement   issued   by    the   British    war   oflB^ce   which 
outlines  the  terms  and   conditions  governing  the  employment  of  women  in  the 
British  armies  in  France. 
British  women's  emergency  corps.     Survey,  v.  33,  p.  64,  October  17,  1914. 

Outlines    the    work    of    the    various    departments   of    the   women's   emergency 
corps. 
Bbodney,  Spencer. 

Woman's  invasion  of  British  industry.     New  York  times  current  history, 
V.  4,  p.  52-55,  April,  1916. 
Chamberlain,  Mary. 

War  on  the  backs  of  the  workers.     Survey,  v.  34,  p.  373-377,  July  24,  1915. 
Literary  digest,  v.   51,  p.  301-302,  August  14,  1915. 

Shows   the   new   fields   of   labor   opened  to   women   of   Europe   since   the   out- 
break   of   the    war ;    also    how    they    are    operating   elevators,    being   ticket   col- 
lectors, etc. 
Changes  in  the  occupations  of  women  and  girls  during  the  war.     Great  Britain, 
Labour  gazette,  v.  25,  p.  438,  December,  1917. 

CONYNGTON,   MaRY. 

Effect  of  the  war  upon  employment  of  women  in  England.     U.  S.  Bureau 
of  labor  statistics.  Monthly  review,  p.  204-217,  April,  1918. 
Courtney,  J.  B. 

War  and  women's  employment.     Fortnightly   review,   v.  103,  p.   239-248, 
February,  1915.      Living  age,  v.  285,  p,  3-10,  April  3,  1915. 

Shows  how  the  war  affects  women's  employment  and  tells  of  the  many  new 
occupations   which    will    be    open    to   them    in   the   future,    such   as   inspectors, 
probation  officers,  prison  visitors,  etc. 
Davis,  Richard  H. 

War  time  changes  in  England.    N.  Y.  times  current  history,  v.  4,  p.  70-71, 
April,  1916. 

DOWDING,   W.    E. 

Registration  act  and  women.     Englishwoman,  v.  193,  p.  205,   September, 
1915. 
Embattled  womanhood.    Collier's  weekly,  v.  58,  p.  20-21,  October  28,  1916. 

This  article  is  short,  but  is  accompanied   by  good   illustrations   which   show 
the   work  of  the   women   of  belligerent  countries,   such   as   repairing  roadways, 
loading  grain  bags,  plowing  fields,  etc. 
Employment  of  women  in  Great  Britain.     Journal  of  the  American  society  of 

mechanical  engineers,  v.  38,  p.  1044-1045,  December,  1916. 
Employment  of  women  in  Great  Britain  owing  to  the  war.     Economics  world, 

June  10,  1916. 
Extension  of  the  employment  of  women.     Labour  gazette.  Great  Britain,  Board 
of  trade,  v.  24.  p.  357-358,  October,  1916 ;  v.  25,  p.  7-8,  125-126,  272-275, 
January,  April,  August,  1917.     Summary  in  August,  1917. 

Reprinted  in  Monthly  review,  U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics,  March,  June, 
October,  1917. 
Extension  of  employment  of  women.     Great  Britain,  Labour  Gazette,  v.  25,  p. 
395,  November,  1917 ;  v.  26,  p.  48,  February,  1918 ;  v.  26,  p.  216,  June,  1918. 
Fawcett,  M.  G. 

War  relief  and  war  service.    Quarterly  review,  v.  225,  p.  111-129,  1916.    See 
page  119  for  the  bringing  of  unemployed  professional  women  of  England 
into  connection  with  societies  which  needed  trained  workers. 
Fawcett,  M.  G. 

Women's  work  in  war  time.    Contemporary  review,  v.  106,  p.  775-782,  De- 
cember, 1914. 


WOMAN   IN   THE   WAR,  25 

Fry,  E.  S. 

Women  and  the  war.     Outlook,  v.  115,  p.  650,  April  11,  1917. 
Hand  of  militarism  in  industry ;  women's  war  work.    Survey,  v.  37,  p.  464-466, 
January  20,  1917. 

A   description   of   the   manual    of   woman's  war   work   Issued   by   the   British 
war  office. 
Haslam,  James. 

Caller  Herrin'.     Englishwoman,  p.  35-43,  January,  1915. 
A   description  of  women's   work  at  Yarmouth. 
HoBBS,  Maegaket  a. 

England's  women  workers  and  the  war.    Life  and  labor,  v.  7,  p.  87-91,  May, 
1918. 
Hopkins,  Tighe. 

What  shall  be  done  for  the  war  woman?    Living  age,  v.  4,  p.  562-564,  De- 
cember 2,  1916. 
How  Great  Britain  is  meeting  the  labor  problem.    Steel  and  metal  digest,  v.  7, 

p.  302-307,  New  York,  1917. 
How  women  are  revolutionizing  the  industries  of  Europe.     Current  opinion,  v. 

63,  p.  60-^1,  July,  1917. 
Importance  of  the  employment  of  women  in  industry  in  Great  Britain  during 

the  war.    Board  of  trade,  Labour  gazette,  p.  83,  March,  1916. 
Industrial  notes.     Engineering   (London),  v.  104,  p.  55-56.  November  23,  1917. 
The  formation  of  a  women's  trade  union  advisory   committee  at  the  request 
of  the  ministry  of  munitions  to  advise  in  matters  concerning  women's  work. 
In  either  case.    Englishwoman,  p.  11.5-121,  November,  1915. 

Some  of  the   changes  effected   and   proposed   in  the   employment  of  women. 
Need  for  women  in  aeroplane  factories,  commercial  offices  and  banks. 
Jones,  C.  Sheeidan. 

Women's  "  mobilization."    Living  age,  v.  285,  p.  438-440,  May  15,  1915.    Re- 
printed from  the  New  witness. 

KINLOCH-COOKE,    SlK    ClEMENT. 

Women  and  the  reconstruction  of  industry.    Nineteenth  cetatury  and  after, 
V.  78,  p.  1396-1416,  December,  1915. 

A  survey  of  the  problem  of  women's  em.ployment  during  war  times  with  spe- 
cial emphasis  on  its  effect  upon  labor  after  the  war. 
Laut,  A.  C. 

Petty  petticoatisms.    Ladies'  home  journal,  v.  34,  p.  24,  August,  1917. 
Labor  in  war  time  and  after.    Nation,  v.  103,  p.  170,  August  24,  1916. 
Less  work  for  women  in  England.    Survey,  v.  40,  p.  99,  April  27,  1918. 

LONGSTAFT,    HeNRY. 

Women's  legion.     Women's  employment,  December  15,  1916. 

Explains  work  in  organizing  English  women  to  take  the  places  of  men. 

Lost  interests.     Spectator,  v.  119,  p.  408-409,  October,  1917. 

Man's  labor  the  best,  British  committee  decides ;  women  handicapped.     N.  Y. 

times  magazine,  May  27,  1917. 
Men,  women,  and  machines.     Spectator,  v.  115,  p.  697,  November  20,  1915. 
Migration  of  women's  labour  through  the  employment  exchanges.     Great  Brit- 
ain, Board  of  trade,  Labour  gazette,  v.  25,  p.  92-93.  March,  1917.     Re- 
printed in  ^Monthly  review,  U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics,  p.  601-664, 
May,  1917.  * 

MuiRHEAD,  James  F. 

Women  in  war.    Nation,  v.  100.  p.  645,  June  10,  1915. 

Coalition  cabinet — women  mobilized.    Nation,  v.  100,  p.  675,  June  17,  1915. 
A  continuation  of  preceding  article  in  which   the  activities  of  some  of  the 
larger    organizations    are    described,    such    as    the    national    union    of    women 
suffrage  societies,  the  women  police  patrols,  women's  emergency  corps. 

74217°— 18 4 


26  WOMAN   IN   THE   WAB. 

National  industrial  conference  board.  Some  experiences  with  war-time  indus- 
trial problems  in  Great  Britain.  Industrial  news  survey,  British  indus- 
trial commission  supplement,  December  5,  1917. 

Considers   problems   of   women's   employment ;    effect   on    eflaciency,    effect   on 
wages,  attitude  of  unions. 

NOETHCOTT,  G.  H. 

Organization  of  labor  for  war.    Political  science  quarterly,  v.  32,  p.  209-223, 
June,  1917. 

'*  The   methods   taken   for   the   control   of   industry   constitute   the   most   sig- 
nificant   contxibution    of   England    to    Industrial    history    during    the    war,    and 
form  an  epoch-making  innovation." 
Parsons. 

Women's  work  during  and  after  the  war.     Proceedings  of  royal  society  of 
arts,  V.  6-1,  p.  229,  1916. 
Phayre,  Ignatius. 

War-time  service  for  women  to  replace  and  release  men.     Windsor  maga- 
zine, V.  42,  p.  505,  1915. 
Problem  of  women  in  industry.    Round  table,  v.  6,  p.  253-284. 
Position  of  the  women  worker  after  the  war.     Economic  journal,  p.  163-191, 

June,  1916. 
Questions  in  parliament^  women  in  munition  works,  wages,  hours;  women  in 
civil  service.    W'oman's  trade  union  review,  p.  13-28,  October,  1916. 
English  conditions. 
Rackman,  Mrs.  and  James  Haslam. 

War  service  for  women.    Englishwoman,  p.  22-38,  July,  1915. 
War's  effect  on  woman's  position  in  the  labor  market. 
Rathbone,  E.  F. 

Remuneration  for  women's  work.    Economic  journal,  v.  27,  p.  55-68,  March, 
1917. 

States  that  two  problems  at  least  concern  women  in  the  work  of  reconstruc- 
tion after  the  war — the  problem  of  the  position  of  the  skilled  woman  in  indus- 
try and  that  of  the  working  class  mothers. 
Replacement  of  men  by  women.    New  statesman,  v.  6,  p.  273-275,  December  25, 

1916. 
Report  on  the  position  of  women  after  the  war.     Standing  joint  committee  of 
industrial  women's  organizations.    Women's  industrial  news,  p.  5-7,  July, 
1917. 

Summary  of  report. 
Robins,  Elizabeth. 

Conscription  for  women.    Contemporary  review,  v.  3,  p.  478.  1917. 
War  service  at  home.    Nineteenth  century,  v.  76,  p.  1113-1122,  1914. 

Describes  the  work  of  the  British  women's  emergency  corps  in  finding  work 
for  the  unemployed. 
Sackville,  Margaret. 

Women  and  war.    English  review,  v.  23,  p.  450-457,  November,  1916.     Liv- 
ing age,  V.  292,  p.  323-328.  February  10,  1917. 

This  article  shows  how  war  affects  women,  particularly  with  regard  to  their 
employment. 
SINCT.AIR,  May. 

Women's  sacrifices  for  the  war.    Collier's  weekly,  v.  43,  p.  13,  November  21, 
1914. 

Takes  tip  the  war  work  of  women,  telling  of  the  work  of  various  organiza- 
tions and  that  of  individuals. 
Stuart,  Stephens. 

Woman  power.    English  review,  v.  23,  p.  549-555,  December,  1916. 
Urges  conscription  for  women  for  factories,  farm   labor,  etc. 


WOMAN   IN   THE   WAE,  27 

War  and  the  local  government  service;  the  employment  of  women.     Municipal 

journal,  London,  May  21,  1915. 
War  and  women.    Living  age,  v.  4,  p.  793-798,  December  30,  1916. 

Brief   sketch   of   woman's   position    before   the   war,    and   a   classified   list   of 
the  positions  she  now  fills. 
War,  women,  and   unemployment  by   the   women's   group   executive.     Fabian 

society  tract  No.  178,  27  p.,  London,  1915. 
War  work  by  women.    The  physical  reactions,  etc.     The  London  times,  weekly 

edition,  October  20,  1916,  p.  851. 
Wafr  work  for  women.     Women's  employment,  v.  16,  p.  4-6,  April  7,  1916. 

Outlines   briefly   opportunities   for.  women   in   various   occupations   with   men- 
tion of  requirements  and  training. 
Where  women  do  the  heaviest  work.     An  interview  with  the  director  of  Gas 
light  and  coke  co.     World's  work  (London),  January,  1918,  p.  162-169. 
Telling  of  the  efficient  work  of  1,600  women. 

Whitney,  J.  P. 

The  women  behind  the  guns.    Independent,  v.  92,  p.  22-23,  October  6,  1917. 
Williams,  Maby  Brush. 

Industrial  Amazons.     Saturday  evening  post,  November  17,  1917. 
Describes  visit  to  various  industries  in  England. 

The  clerk's  innings,  Saturday  evening  post,  p.  26,  28,  30,  33,  35,  37,  38,  illus., 
September  29,  1917. 

Some  of  the  war  occupations  of  English  women. 
Wilson,  M.  M. 

British  women  in  the  war.    Outlook,  v.  113,  p.  703,  July  26,  1916. 
Woman  movement.     New  international  year  book.     Dodd,  p.  740-742,  1915. 

Shows  the  effect  of  the  war  upon  the  woman  movement.     Tells  of  some  of 
the  relief   work  done  by   the  women   and   the  new   employments   now   open   to 
them. 
Women  doing  men's  work.     New  York  times  current  history,  v.  4,  p.  784-788, 

August,  1916. 
Women  in  British  industry.     American  review  of  reviews,  v.  55,  p.  311-312, 
March,  1917. 

Shows   how   the  war   has   forced   women   to   take   up   occupations   that   have 
heretofore  been  carried  on  by   men,  such   as  munition  factory  work. 
Women  in  industry.    W^omen  take  large  part  in  English  war  work.    The  annal- 
ist, December  10,  1917. 

Giving  tables  of  increase  and  distribution  of  replacement  prepared  by  min- 
istry of  labor. 
Women  in  industry.     Information,  n.  s.,  v.  2,  p.  287-288,  July,  1916. 

"  The  woman's  emergency  corps,  representing  .3,000  women  of  Toronto,  June, 
1914,  offered  their  services  to  the  Canadian  manufacturer's  association." 

"  Something  like  2,500,000  women  and  girls  entered  the  industries  of  Great 
Britain  between  the  beginning  of  1915  and  June  1st." 
Women  in  industry,  now  and  after  the  war.     Account  of  meeting  of  national 
council  of  women  of  Great  Britain  and  Ireland.     Woman's  employment, 
V.  17,  p.  7,  October  19,  1917. 
Women  in  national  service.    The  times,  London,  p.  4,  March  19,  1917. 

Article  on  what  women  are  needed  for  and  have  done  in  the  war  emergency. 
Women  and  war;  Wordsworth.    Church  quarterly  review,  p.  363-374,  January, 

1915. 
Women  and  the  war.    Nation.  London,  v.  18,  p.  753-754,  February  26,  1916. 
Women  and  war.    New  York  times  current  history,  v.  4,  p.  209-210,  May,  1916. 
Women  and  war.    Outlook,  v.  109,  p.  676-677,  March  24.  1915. 
Women  and  the  war.    Spectator,  v.  115,  p.  101,  July  24,  1915. 
Women  in  workshops.    Engineer,  v.  121,  p.  133-13*,  February  11,  1916.    Woman's 
work  in  workshops  in  England.    Illus. 


28  WOMAN   nr   THE   WAK. 

Women's  part  in  the  war.    Living  age,  v.  287,  p.  57-59.     October  2,  1915.    Re- 
printed from  Saturday  review. 

Work  of  the  board  of  trade  local  advisory  committee  upon  women's  war  em- 
ployment.    Board  of  trade,  Labour  gazette,  p.  403,  November,  1916. 
Finding  women  for  industrial  work  in  Great  Britain. 

Wynne  ?»Lvy, 

War  woman.    Graphic,  London,  v.  94,  p.  652-653,  November  24,  1916. 

The  war  has  been  a  moral  forcing  house  which  has  aided  woman's  develop- 
ment, but  has  not  revolutionized  her. 

ZiMMEEMAN,   D.    M. 

Civil  service  and  woman.    Political  quarterly,  p.  79-103,  September,  1916. 
Based  on  a  report  of  an  inquiry  made  on  behalf  of  tht>  women's  industrial 
council. 

United  States. 

books  and  pamphlets. 

American  labor  legislation  review,  v.  VI,  no.  4.    Women  in  industry. 
Arbuthnot,  G.  C. 

Women's  economic  service  in  time  of  war.    Western  reserve  university  bull., 
V.  20,  no.  3,  Cleveland,  Ohio,  16  p.,  April,  1917.    Replacements  in  England, 
with  some  consideration  of  American  problems. 
Blatch,  Haukiot  Stanton. 

Mobilizing  woman  power.     N.  Y.,  The  woman's  press,  1918.     195  p. 
BuixARD,  W.  Irving. 

Women's  work  in  war  time.  Boston.  Merchants  National  bank,  85  p.,  1917. 
A  survey  of  English  conditions  for  the  purpose  of  enabling  American  in- 
dustries to  profit  by  their  experience.  Introductory  sections  on  welfare  work 
in  war  tinio  and  replacement  of  men  by  women  in  industry  in  Great  Britain  are 
followed  by  brief  outlines  of  the  operations  in  the  principal  industries  where 
women  have  replaced  men. 
Daggett,  Mabel  Potter. 

Women  wanted.    George  H.  Doran  Co.,  illus.,  1918. 

The  story  of  what  v/omen  have  done  in  industry  during  the  war  in  Prance 
and  England  and  a  discussion  of  the  influence  these  new  conditions  may  have 
on  the  race. 
Employment  of  women  in  the  storage  and  warehouse  depots  of  the  U.  S.  Army. 
Bulletin  no.  9.     Prepared  by  Mary  Van  Kleeck.     Storage  committee  of 
the  war  industries  board,  council  of  national  defense. 
Increased  employment  of  women  in  industry.     A  report  on  the  problems  of 
substituting  female  workers  for  male  to  meet  the  present  labor  scarcity. 
Merchants'  association.     New  York,  November,  1917. 
Plans  for  mobilization  of  female  labor  in  time  of  war.     U.  S.  Labor  statistics 
bureau,  Monthly  review,  p.  1002-1004,  June,  1917. 

Activities  of  bureau  of  registration  and  Information  of  the   national  league 
for  woman's  service.      Policy   outlined  by  U.   S.    Secretary   of  labor,   regarding 
,  the  employment  of  women. 
War  demands  for  industrial  training.     National  society  for  the  promotion  of 
industrial  education,  N.  Y.,  August,  1917,  40  p. 

Contains    section    on    responsibility    of    the    industries    for    training    needed 
workers.     What    some    industrial    plants   and   technical    schools   are   doing    for 
emergency  training. 
War  and  the  woman  wage  earner.     Bulletin,  v.  4,  p.  13-24,  October,  1917. 

National  association  of  corporation  schools.     Compilation  of  data  relative  to 
condition  of  women  wage  earners  of  the  United  States  as  affected  by  the  war. 
Women  in  our  industrial  army.     Travelers'  insuracne  go.  and  Travelers'  indem- 
nity  CO.,    engineering   and    inspection    division,    Hartford,    Conn.      The 
Travelers'  standard,  11  p.,  illus.,  September.  1917. 

Conditions  of  woman's  work  with  machinery,  hours  of  labor,  kind  ©f  work, 
and  necessity  of  employing  women. 


WOMAN   nT   THE   WAS.  29 

AETICLES   IN    PERIODICALS. 

American  women  in  industrial  war  work  now  number  over  million  and  a  quar- 
ter.   Official  bulletin,  p.  4,  January  17,  1918. 

Report  of  surveys  made  in  states  by  Marie  L.  Obenauer. 
Are  many  women  replacing  soldiers  in  industrial  work?     Current  opinion,  v. 

64,  p.  60-61,  January,  1918. 
Are  women  being  employed  to  replace  soldiers?     Greater  New  York,  Merchants' 
association,  v.  6,  p.  5-9,  November  12,  1917. 

Results   of  an   original   investigation  made   by   the   industrial  bureau   of  the 
association. 
Bakee,  Donald  A. 

Women  workers  in  the  shop.     Machinery,  v.  24,  p.  451,  January,  1918. 

The  advantages   and   disadvantages  of  employing  women  in   machine   shops. 
Betth,  John  (Ian  Hay,  pseud.). 

What  can  I,  as  a  woman  do?    The  Englishwoman's  answer  to  the  American 
woman's  question.    Ladies'  home  journal,  v.  34,  p.  29,  June,  1917. 

States  the  many   things  the  women   of  England  are  doing  to   help,   such  as 
nursing,  working  in  munition  factories,  etc. 
Britain's  industrial  revolution ;  its  lessons  for  America.     Industrial  manage- 
ment, p.  625-629,  August,  1917. 

Considers  some  of  the  elements  that  may  be  foreseen  in  the  coming  indus- 
trial readjustment  in  the  United  States. 
BuLLAED,  W.  Irving. 

Women's  work  in  war  time.    Special  libraries,  v.  9,  p.  2-3,  January,  1918. 
Business  digest.    January-March,  1917,  v.  1,  N.  Y.    Cumulative  digest  corpora- 
tion, 1917,  506  p.    Women  in  industry,  p.  500-502. 

A  brief  account   of  work   of  women   in  France   and   Great  Britain   and   the 
study  of  the  problems  in  the  United  States. 
Colvin,  Fred  H. 

Women  in  the  machine  shops.    American  machinist,  N.  Y.,  v.  47,  p.  507-512, 
September  20,  1917. 

A  discussion  of  the  problem  involved  together  with  the  experiences  of  some 
manufacturers. 
Ceissey,  Forrest. 

Women,  war  and  wages.     Saturday  evening  post,  v.  189,  p.  25-30,  January 
20,  1917. 
Daggett,  Mabel  Potter. 

Series  of  articles  on  "  What  the  war  really  means  to  women."     Pictorial 
review,  November,  1917- June,  1918. 
Davenport,  H.  J. 

Nation  must  call  its  reserves  of  female  labor.    Annalist,  v.  9,  p.  783,  June 
11,  1917. 
Detjtsch,  Babette. 

Replacements,    fact    or    fiction?    League    for    business    opportunities    for 
women,  Bulletin,  p.  1-2,  July,  1917. 

Some   of   the   new   openings    for  women   resulting   from   the   war   and   oppor- 
tunities for  special  training. 
Female  labor   aroused   hostility   and   apprehension   in   union    ranks.     Current 

opinion,  v.  64,  p.  292-294,  April,  1918. 
Field,  Amy  W^alker. 

Women  in  industry  and  the  war  program.     New  York  Evening  post,  May  14, 
1918. 
Filling  in  the  gaps  left  by  the  draft.    Factory,  v.  19,  p.  345-347,  September,  1917. 
Feyee,  E.  M. 

Mobilizing  woman's  service.     Independent,  June  16,  1917. 


30  WOMAN    IN    THE   WAB. 

Gillespie,  Harriet  Sisson, 

Where  girls  are  really  doing  men's  jobs.     Ladies'  home  journal,  v.  34,  p.  83, 
November,  1917. 
Glover,  Katherine. 

War  crisis  liberates  the  potential  powers  of  women.     League  for  business 
opportunities  for  women.     Bulletin,  p.  1-2,  May,  1917. 

Refers   to  work   of  national   league   for  women's   service   in  opening  tralnini; 
courses 'for  women  to  fill  positions  in  banks  and  trust  companies 
GOLDMARK,    P. 

Facts  as  to  women  in  war  industries.     New  republic,  v.  13,  p.  2.51-252, 
December  29,  1917. 
Government  control  of  women's  work.     Survey,  v.  39,  p.  72,  October  20,  1917. 

Bureau    of    registration    and    information    of    national    league    for    women's 
service  transferred  to  department  of  labor. 
Haemon,  Dudley. 

What  are  those  war  jobs  for  women?     Where  they  are  and  how  to  get 
them.    Ladies'  home  journal,  November,  1917. 

Explains    in    what   occupations   there   is   chief   demand   for    women    and   how 
this   demand   is   being  met.      Lists   some   of   the   kinds    of   factory    work   where 
women  are  needed. 
Healy,  Maey  Ten  NY. 

Employment  of  women  in  Boston  following  the  draft.     Journal  of  associa- 
tion of  collegiate  alumnae,  v.  11,  p.  303-306,  .January,  1918. 

A  summary  of  the  survey  made  by  the  W.  E.  &  I.  U.  to  ascertain  to  what  ex- 
tent employers  in  Boston  were  employing  or  willing  to  employ  women  in  place 
of  men. 
How  British  industry  was  adapted  to  the  war.     Greater  New  York,  Merchants' 
association,  v.  6,  p.  7-12,  November  26,  1917. 

Summary    made    by    the    industrial    bureau    of    the    association    of   what    the 
English    committee    from    the    ministry    of    munitions    had    to    tell    the    manu- 
facturers of  the  United  States  with  a  selection  of  the  questions  asked  and  th© 
answers  given  by  the  committee. 
Increasing  employment  of  women.    American,  August,  1917. 
Industrial  citizenship  for  women.    New  republic,  v.  15,  p.  304-305,  July  13,  1918. 
Industry  recruits  women  into  ranks  of  labor.     Iron  trade  review^  p.  132-133, 
July  19,  1917. 

Brief  account  of  the  initiation  of  women  into  American  industries. 

Instructing  women  in  war  work.     Scientific  American,  v.  117,  p.  231,  September 

29,  1917. 
Johnson,  Ethel  M. 

Literature  of  women  in  industry.     Special  libraries,  t.  9,  p.  109-112,  May, 

1918. 
Women  and  war-time  industries.    Special  libraries,  v.  9,  p.  1,  January,  1918. 
Abstract  of  lecture  delivered  October  18,  1917. 
Kelley,  Florence. 

The  war  and  women  workers.    Survey,  v.  39,  p.  628-631,  March  9,  1918. 

A  discussion  of  bills  pending  in  New  York  legislature  which  aect  the  labor 
of  women  and  children. 
Knoeppel,  C.  E. 

American  industry  needs  women.     100  per  cent.  The  Efficiency  magazine, 

V.  9,  p.  96-102,  December,  1917. 
Facing  the  problem.    100  per  cent,  The  Efficiency  magazine,  v.  10,  p.  92-96, 

April,  1918. 
The  problem  of  women  in  war  industry.     Industrial  management,  v.  55, 
p.  385-387,  May,  1918. 

Summarized  in  Literary  digest,  p.  32,  June  1,  1918,  under  title  "  When  shall 
we  need  the  women?  " 
American  women  in  war  industry.     Industrial  management,  v.  55,  p.  480- 
483 ;  V.  56,  p.  49-52,  June,  July,  1918. 


WOMAN   IN   THE   WAB.  31 

Laut,  Agnes  C. 

The  woman  who  has  gone.     Ladies'  home  journal,  v.  34,  p.  32  and  56,  Sep- 
tember, 1917. 

Reaction  of  women  to  the  war  in  a  general  way  as  to  the  industries,  witli 
predictions  of  the  woman  to  come. 
The  labor  shortage.    New  republic,  v.  12,  p.  316-317,  October  20,  1917. 

A  discussion  of  the  necessity  of  the  substitution  of  the  work  of  women  for 
that  of  men  and  the  problems  arising  therefrom. 

Lord,  C.  B. 

How  to  deal  successfully  with  women  in   industry.     Industrial  manage- 
ment, V.  53,  p.  838-845,  September,  1917. 
New  work  for  women  created  by  the  war.     Scientific  American  supplement,  v. 
83,  p.  200. 

Discusses  the  employment  of  women  in  mechanical  work. 

Norton,  Esther. 

Women  in  war  industries.    New  republic,  v.  13,  p.  179-181,  December  15, 
1917. 
Obenauee,  Marie  L. 

The  wage-earning  woman  in  the  winning  of  the  war.     Release,  April  14, 
1918.     Committee  on  public  information. 
Ohner,  W.  I. 

Why  we  are  replacing  men  with  women.    Factory,  v.  18,  p.  313-316,  March, 
1917. 
One   labor    shortage   problem    solved.      Women    in   machine    shops    a   success. 
Thousands  of  women  are  doing  efficient  work  on  machine  tools  of  many 
classes.      Different    management    methods   are   found    to    be    necessary. 
Piece-work  rates  same  as  for  men  but  time  rates  somewhat  lower.    Engi- 
neering news  record,  v.  80,  p.  69-71,  January  10,  1918. 
Opportunities  for  women  in  national  service.     Country  gentleman,  v.  82,  p.  915, 

May  19,  1917. 
Osborn,  C. 

The  war  and  women's  Employment.     Charity  organization  review,  n.  s.  v. 
36,  p.  279-289,  November,  1917. 
Plans  for  mobilization  of  female  labor  in  time  of  war.     U.  S.  Labor  statistics 
bureau,  Monthly  review,  p.  1002-1004,  June,  1917. 

Activities  of  bureau  of  registration  and   information  of  the  national   league 
for  woman's   service.     Policy   outlined   by   U.    S.    Secretary   of   labor   regarding 
employment  of  women. 
Porter,  Harry  Franklin. 

Detroit's  plan   for  recruiting  women  for  industries.     Industrial   manage- 
ment magazine,  v.  53,  p.  654-649,  August,  1917. 

Report    of   a   survey   of   the    possibilities   of  employing  women   in   the   city's 
industries.     Includes    reports   on   standards   of   working  conditions,    on  recruit- 
ing and  placing  applicants,  and  on  education. 
Increasing  employment  of   women  in  business.     Americas,  v.  3,   p.  9-13, 
August,  1917. 

The  author  says  that  it  Is  no  longer  a  question  of  whether  the  replacement 
of  men  by  women  is  desirable  or  feasible  ;  the  scarcity  of  men  makes  the  em- 
ployment of  women  a  necessity. 
Report  on  first  United  States  war  labor  survey  made  by  federal .  employment 
service.     Covers  conditions  in  New  York  state.     Miss  Obenauer's  report, 
Official  bulletin,  p.  4,  January  11,  1918. 
RiESER,  Chas.  a. 

Industry,  the  war  and  the  woman.    General  federation  magazine,  v.  16,  p. 
ia-14.  December,  1917. 


32  WOMAN   IN    THE   WAE. 

Shanee,  E.  L. 

Filling  the  thinning  ranks  of  labor.    Iron  trade  review,  v.  60,  p.  1391-1395, 
1917. 

The  problem  of  replacement  of  men  by  women  and  the  possibility  of  using 
Chinese  labor. 
Skill  and  women  war  workers.     Industrial   management,   v.   53,   p.   125-126, 

April,  1917. 
Special  report  on  different  places  around  Boston  which  are  employing  women 
in  place  of  men.     3  p.,  type.,  1917,     Merchants  national  bank. 

Lists    some    colleges,    banking    institutions,    and    industrial    companies.     Re- 
ports their  experiences  as  to  employing  women  in  place  of  men. 
Still,  F.  R. 

Women    as    machinists.     Industrial   management,    v.    53,    p.    650-654,    Au- 
gust, 1917. 

Treats    of    transformation    that    has    taken    place    because    of    women's    en- 
trance.    Transportation     methods,     class     distinctions.     Sources     from     which 
American  women   may  be  drawn  and  suggestions  as  to   their  treatment. 
Supervision  of  women's  war  work.     Survey,  June  30,  1917.     Bureau  of  regis- 
tration and  information  of  national  league  of  women's  service. 
The  woman's  viewpoint,  by  a  working  woman.     The  Efficiency  magazine,  v.  10, 

p.  96-100,  March,  1918. 
Thoene,  F.  C. 

Women  and  war  service.     American  federationist,  v,  24,  p.  455-456,  June, 
1917. 

The  problem  is  not  to  resist  the  entrance  of  women  in  industry  but  to  direct 
the  movement. 
TJpp,  John  W. 

Women  workers.    Journal  of  the  American  society  of  mechanical  engineers, 
January,  1918. 

General  discussion  of  the  porblem  and  the  way  it  has  worked  in  one  plant 
(with  illustrations). 
Van  Kleeck,  Maey. 

Woman's  work  for  the  war.     Reprint  from  New  York  Evening  post,  March 
6,  1918. 

The  government  labor  platform  and  the  work  of  the  woman's  division  of  the 
ordnance  department. 
VlALL,  W.  A, 

Employment  of  women  in  our  industries.     American  machinist,  May  30, 
1918. 
Weakley,  F.  E. 

How  we  are  training  women  workers.     System,  v,  32,  p,  909-911,  Decem- 
ber, 1917. 

What  one  plant  in  the  United  States  is  doing. 
Will  war  increase  women's  spending?    Woman's  wear,  p.  17-20-21,  November 
22,  1917. 

Survey  of  women's  occupations  in  Ohio  and  Iowa  of  the  replacing  of  male 
by  female  labor,  and  of  the  changes  in  wages.     Tabulation  of  new  employments. 
Women  in  industry.    Information,  v.  3,  p.  325-326,  March,  1917. 

This  briefly  summarizes  the  work  of  women  in  war  time  In  France  and  Eng- 
land and  tells  of  the  work  to  be  done  by  American  women.     This  material  may 
be  supplemented  by  consulting  ensuing  numbers  of  this  magazine. 
Women  replace  men  in  the  inspection  dept.   (of  the  Burroughs  adding  machine 
CO.,  Detroit).     Iron  age,  v.  100,  p.  1477,  December  20,  1917. 


WOMAN    IN    THE    WAR.  33 

MUNITIONS. 
Fkance. 

BOOKS. 

Atherton,  Gertrude. 

Munition  makers.     (In  The  living  present,  N.  Y.,  p.  34-44.) 
Walter,  Henriette  R. 

Munition  Avorkers  in  England  and  France.    N.  Y.,  Russell  Sage  Foundation, 
61  p.,  1917. 

A  summary  of  reports  issued  by  the  British  ministry  of  munitions. 

articles  in  periodicals. 

Employment  of  women  in  manufacture  of  artillery  ammunition.    L'lllustration, 

p.  170-171,  August  14,  1915. 
Establishment  of  trade  schools  for  French  munition  workers.     U.  S.  Bureau  of 

labor  statistics,  Monthly  review,  p.  43-44,  October,  1917. 
Female  labor  in  French  munition  plants.    Iron  age,  v.  98,  p.  737,  September  28, 

1916. 
French  women  as  munition  makers.     N.  Y.  times  current  history,  v.  4,  p.  821- 

322,  May,  1916. 

Discusses   wages,   hours   of  labor,   former   occupations   of   the  workers. 
Wells,  Martin. 

Women  workers  of  France.    Scientific  American,  v.  114,  p.  236-239,  March 

4,  1916. 

Germany. 

articles  in  periodicals. 
Hartmann,  G. 

Die    frauenarbeit    in   der    metallindustrie   wahren    der    kriegzeit.     Soziale 

praxis,  August  12,  1915. 
Women's  war  time  work  in  German  metal   trades.     U.   S.   Bureau  of  labor 

statistics.  Monthly  review,  p.  134-135,  September,  1917. 
Women  in  the  German  metal  trades.    Iron  age,  v.  100,  p.  21,  1917. 
Women  in  German  munition  plants.    Iron  age,  v.  100,  p.  1393,  December  6,  1917. 
Women  in  the  Krupp  works.     Review  of  reviews,  v.  54,  p.  337-338,  September, 

1916. 
Women  in  Krupp  works.     Social  service  review,  v.  6,  p.  24,  November,  1917. 

Great  Britain. 

BOOKS. 

Caine.  Hall. 

Our  girls,  their  work  for  the  war.     London,  Hutchinson,  1916. 
Sketches  of  munition  workers 
COSENS,    INIONICA. 

Lloyd  George's  munition  girls.     Lon<]on,  Hutchinson  &  Co.,  160  p.  1016. 
FoxwELL,  Agnes  Kate. 

Munition  lasses:  Six  months  as  principal  overlooker  in  danger  buildings. 
London  and  N.  Y..  Hoddor  &  Stoughton,  156  p.,  1917. 
Describing  the  work  at  Woolwich  arsenal. 

74217°— 18 5 


34  WOMAN    IN    THE    WAR. 

Fraser.  Helen. 

Women    and    munitions.     {In   Women    and    war   work.      N.    Y.,    1918,    p. 
109-127.) 
Cable,  Boyd. 

The  women.     (Tn  Doing  their  bit.     N.  Y.,  1916,  p.  71-90.) 
Describes  visits  to  munition  factories. 
Stone,*  Gilbert,  cd. 

Munition  work,     (/n  Women  war  workers.     N.  Y.,  1917,  p.  2r)-45.) 

aeticles  in  periodicals. 
Alec-Tweedie,  Mrs. 

Woman's  army.     English   review,   London,   v.   24,   p.  39-^8,    January,   1917. 
Women  as  munition  worl^ers  ;  hours,  wages,  conditions  of  employraont. 
A  woman's  night  in  furnaceland.     English  review,  v.  22,  p.  463-469,  May, 

1916. 

Gives  some  idea  of  the  hardships  the  women  of  England  go  through  in  the 
munition  factories. 
Behind  the  firing  line.     Blackwood's  Edinburgh  magazine,  v.  199.  p.  191-207, 

February,  1916. 

A  long  account  of  an  Englishwoman's  experience  in  a  munition  factory. 
Big  British  howitzers.     Scientific  American,  v.  116,  p.  423,  April  28,  1917. 

A  short  article  showing  the  heavy  work  done  by  the  women. 
Blaie,  Sir  Robert. 

War  work  of  the  London  schools.     Manual  training  magazine,  p.  37-40, 

October,  1917. 

Women  trained  to  do  men's  work.     Training  workers  for  munitions  factories. 
British  and  French  women  make  shells.     Iron  trade,  v.  57,  p.  686-687,  October 
7,  1915. 

These   two   pages   contain   pictures   with   clear   explanations   of   the   work   of 
British   and   French   women   in   munition  factories   which   prove   that   they   are 
capable  as  they  are  patriotic. 
British  shell  factory.     Iron  age,  v.  98.  p.  352-354,  August  17,  1916. 
Conyngton,  Mary. 

Women  in  the  munition  trades  in  Great  Britain.     U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor 
statistics,  Monthly  review,  p.  151-163,  May,  1918. 
Dealing  with  the  numbers,  wages,  and  hours. 
Drexel,  Constance. 

W^omen  behind  the  gun.    Delineator,  v.  87,  p.  19,  November,  1915. 
Describes  the  work  of  British  women  in  munition  factories. 
Employment  of  women  as  machinists.     Engineer,  v.  120,  p.  218,  September  3, 

1915. 

This  account  of  woman's  work  as  machinists  in  English  munition  factories 
tells  of  the  great  success  tbey  have  made  in  replacing  men. 
Employment  of  women  on  munitions  of  war.    Engineer,  v.  121,  p.  123,  February 
31.  1916. 

This  article  briefly  summarizes  the  contents  of  a  little  book   issued  by  the 
ministry  of  munitions  of  London,  which   deals  with  the  employment  of   .vomon 
on  munitions  of  war  in  England.     It  shows  how  readily  women  have  learned 
to  manipulate  the  heavy  machines  used  in  this  work. 
Moore,  Mary  MacL. 

Britain's  munition  workers.    Canada,  v.  43,  p.  69-70,  July  18,  1916. 
New  plan  for  labor  substitution  in  munition  factories  of  Great  Britain.     U.  S. 

Bureau  of  labor  statistics.  Monthly  review,  p.  L5-28,  July,  1917. 
Notes  on  employment  of  women  on  munitions  of  war.     Engineering,  p.  137, 

February  11,  1916. 
Notes  on  the  employment  of  women  on  munitions  of  war,  with  an  appendix  on 
the  training  of  munition   workers.     Ministry  of  munitions.     95  p.,   ill., 
London,  February  1,  1916.     Summary  in  U.  S.  Monthly  review,  Bureau 
of  labor  statistics,  p.  105,  September,  1916. 


WOMAN   IN   THE   WAR,  35 

Optical  munition  work  as  an  em})loyment  for  women.     Women's  employment, 

V.  17,  p.  3,  August  17,  1917. 
Prothers,  John  K. 

Women,  munition  and  the  law.     Everyman,  v.  9,  p.  289-290,  January  26, 
1917. 
Smith,  Rosamond. 

Women  and   munition   work.     Women's   industrial   news,   p.   14-20,   April, 
1916. 
Taking  care  of  the  world's  women  munition  makers.     Literary  digest,  v,  54,  p. 

194-195,  January  27,  1917. 
Training  for  munition  work.     Woman's  employment,  v.  16,   p.   6,   October  20, 
1916. 

Tells  of  requirements  for  training  and  gives  names  of  centers  where  such  is 
given. 
Training  of  munition  workers.     Great  Britain  ministry  of  munitions.     Appen- 
dix of  report  on  employment  of  women  in  munitions,  issued  February, 
1916. 
Wages  of  women  munition  workers.   Women's  trade  union  review,  p.  6-16,  July 

1916.  Also  questions  in  parliament  on  women  munition  workers. 
War,  women,  wages,  and  munitions.     Survey,  v.  35,  p.  692-693,  1916. 

Discusses  the  effectiveness  of  the  rules   formulated  by  the  munitions   labor 
supply  committee  and  the  recomendations  of  health  of  munition  workers'  com- 
mittee,  Great  Britain. 
West,  Rebecca. 

Mothering  the  munition  worker.     New  republic,  p.   298-300,   October  13, 
1917. 
Women  and  the  munitions  act.     Wc-raen's  trade  union  reviev:,  p.  7-18,  July, 

1917.  Reconstruction  of  factory  life. 

Questions    in    Parliament    regarding    the    employment    of    women.       In    the 
same  issue  there  are  sections  on  factories  and  worksliops  in  1916. 
Women  in  munition  courts.    English  women,  p.  213-21,  March,  1917. 
Women  in  the  munitions  industry.     Industrial  Canada,  v.  17,  p.  622,  Toronto, 

1916,  illus. 
Women  munition  workers  and  their  pay.     Survey,  p.  665,  March  10,  1917. 
Women  in  munitions  work.     Engineering  magazine,  v.  51,  p.  118,  April,  1916. 
This  short  article  tells  of  the  heavy  work  which  the  women  of  England  are 
doing  in  the  many  shell  factories.     In  many  cases  men   are  only  employed  as 
overseers. 
Women  workers  and  war  (by  a  civil  engineer).     Englishwoman,  p.  20-28,  Octo- 
ber, 1915.     AVorkers  in  munition  factories. 
Women  workers  in  Great  Britain.     Engineer,  v.  123,  p.  4-5,  January  5,  1917. 

The  work  done  in  munition  factories. 
Women  as  munition  makers.     The  satisfactory  results  obtained  for  operating 
the  lighter  machine  tools.    Scientific  American  supplement,  p.  371,  Decem- 
ber 11,  1915. 
Women  as  shell  makers.    Engineer,  v.  122,  p.  358-359,  October  20,  1916. 

This  article  is  the  result  of  an  inspection  tour  of  the  writer  among  some  of 
the  shell  factories  in   England   whore   women   are  employed.     Classification   of 
their   work   is  made,   telling  the   uniforms   worn   by   different   women   to   distin- 
guish the  sort  of  work  they  do. 
Women  employees  in  British  steel  vrorks.     Responsible  work  in  making  muni- 
tions and  machine  tools;  classification  of  their  capabilities  as  a  result  of 
the  war.     Illus.,  Iron  age,  v.  100,  p.  196-197,  1917. 
Women  in  British  industry.     American  review  of  reviews,   v.  55,  p.  311-312, 
March,  1917. 

Shows   how   the   war   has    forced    women    1o    tako   up   occupations    that   have 
heretofore  been  carried  on  by  men,  such  as  munition  factory  work. 


36  WOMAN   IN    THE    WAR. 

Women  in  mechanical  work.    Efficiency  in  munition  plants.     Sntnrrlay  evening 

post,  p.  25,  January  20,  1917. 
Women  war  munition  workers.    Enj2:ineering,  London,  v.  103,  p.  372. 
Women  war  munition  workers.    Machinery  (Eng.  eel.),  v.  23,  p.  915,  illus.,  June, 

1917. 

Telling  American  women  what  has  been  done  in  England. 

Italy. 

Employment  of  women  and  boys  in  munitions  works  in  Italy.     Great  Britain, 
Board  of  trade,  Labour  gazette,  v.  4,  p.  52-53,  December,  1916. 

The   text   of   circulars   by    nnderserretary    for   arms    and    munitions   with    re- 
gard to  female  employment. 

United  States. 


Hewes,  Amy. 

Women  as  munition  mnkers.     A  study  of  conditions  in  Bridgeport.     N.  Y., 
Russell  Sage  Foundation,  92  p.,  May,  1917. 

aeticles  in  periodicals. 

Employment  of  males  and  females  in  certain  United   States  munition  plnnts 
(table).     U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics,  Monthly  review,  p.  16^-165, 
May,  191 S. 
Hewes,  Amy. 

Women  as  munition  workers.     Survey,  v.  37,  p.  379-385,  January  6,  1917. 
A  study  of  conditions  in  Bridgeport.     Illus. 

Describes  processes  performed,  hours  of  labor,   and  wages. 

Munition  work  successfully  undertaken  by  women  in  temporary  substitution  of 
male  labor.    Merchants  national  bank,  Boston,  10  p.,  type,  1917. 

A  summary  of  the  various  processes  of  munition  work  in   which  women   are 
engaged. 

Skill  and  women  war  workers.    Industrial  management,  v.  53,  p.  125-126,  April, 
1917. 

Shows    the   need    of    training    women    along    various    lines    of   work,    such    as 
munition  and  other  factory  work. 
Van  Kleeck,  Mary. 

Women  in  the  munition  industries.     Life  and  labor,  v.  7,  p.  113-116,  122, 
June,  1918. 
Women  behind  the  gun.    Independent,  v.  91,  p.  357,  September  1,  1917. 
Women  in  munitions  work.     Outlook,  v.  118,  p.  682,  April  24,  1918.     Reprinted 
from  Iron  age. 

RAILWAYS    AND    STREETS    CARS. 

France. 

articles  in  periodicals. 
Hiatt,  W.  S. 

Efficiency  of  French  women  as  railway  workers.     Raihrny  nge   gazette, 
v.  59,  p.  943-945,  Novewiber  19,  1915. 

This  article  tells  of  the  efficiency  of  25.000  French  women   being  employed 
as  railway  employees.     They   fill  such  positions  as  porters. 


WOMAN    IN    THE   WAR.  37 

Pahin,  L. 

Women   labor  on   French   tramways.     Electric   railway   journal,  v.   50,   p. 
187-188,  August  4,  1917. 
Railway  employees.     Railway  jobs  for  our  women.     Literary  digest,  v.  54,  p. 

1778,  June  9,  1917. 
Railway  employees.     Women  workers  on  French  railways.     Literary  digest,  v. 

52,  p.  16-17,  January  1,  1916. 
Report  on  the  employment  of  women  by  French  railways.     Commerce  reports, 

p.  307,  April  24,  1916. 
Wells,  Maktin. 

Women  workers  of  France.     Scientific  American,  v.  114,  r).  236-239,  March 
4,  1916. 

An  account  of  how  the  women  of  France  have  enlisted  thoii-  services  in  all 

lines  of  work       Good  illustrations  show  women   working  on  the   railroads   and 

in   munition   factories.      New   duties   that  women   are  assuming   to   release   men 

needed  at  the  front. 

Women  workers  in  French  railroads.     Literary  digest,  p.  16,  January  1,  1916. 

Geraeany. 

articles  in  periodicals. 

Women  conductoi-s  in  Berlin.     Electric  railway  journal,  v.  46.  p.  67.^,  October 
2,  1915. 

A   short   article   showing   how  women    are   being   trained   to   handle   iJu;iitions 
as  conductors  in  Berlin. 

Great  Britain. 

articles  in  periodicals. 
Dalkymple,  J. 

Tramways   during   war   times.     Electric   railway   journal,    v.   45.   p.   860, 
October  23,  1915. 

A  short  article  which  tells  of  the  number  of  women  now  being  emploj'ed  as 
conductors  and  of  their  success  in  these  new  positions. 
Women  as  railway  conductors,    Aera,  v.  4,  p.  1016,  April,  1916. 
Employment  of  women  in  the  war  emergency.     Railway  age  gazette,  p.  1407- 
1411,  June  22,  1917. 

Generalization    of    employment    of    women    on    railroads    with    detail    as    to 

schools,   the   skilled  and   unskilled   work  at   shops,  and   the   English  experience. 

Employment  of  women  on  railway  work  in  Great  Britain.     Literary  digest,  v. 

50,  p.  1533,  June  26,  1915. 
Employment  of  women  on  tramways  in  Great  Britain.     Electric  railway  jour- 
nal, V.  46,  p.  1136,  December  4,  1915. 

The  last   half  of  this   article  deals  with  the   employment  of  women   on   rail- 
roads in  England. 
Extension  of  women's  employment   during  the  war.     Railway   news,   v.   106, 

p.  55,  October  21,  1916. 
Labor  organization  and  the  war. 

The  employment  of  women.    Municipal  journal,  London,  v.  24,  p.  444,  May 

14,  1915.     Women  as  conductors  on  tramways. 
Women  for  tramway  service.     Municipal  journal,  London,  v.  24,  p.  419, 
May  7,  1915. 
Robertson,  Archibald. 

Women   drivers.     Tramway   and  railway  world,   v.  42,   p.   33-35,   London, 
1917. 
The  railroads  of  Canada  and  the  war.     Railway  age  gazette,  v.  62,  p.  1299- 
1306,  June  22,  1917. 


38  WOMAN   IN    THE    WAB. 

Stone,  GrLP.EKT,  ed. 

"Fares  please!"     {In  women  war  workers,  N.  Y..  p.  108-131.) 
The  woman    conductor    and    the    possibility    of    her    permanent    employment. 

Tramway  and  railway  world,  v.  39,  p.  275-276,  London,  1916. 
Women  as  drivers.    Electric  railway  journal,  il.,  v.  50,  p.  303,  1917, 
Women  conductors  for  London.     Electric  railway  journal,  v,  46,  p.  962,  No- 
vember 6,  1915. 

Discusses  the  advisability  of  women  being  employed  as  conductors  on  the  rail- 
ways. 
Women  fast  taking  the  places  in  tramway  service  of  men  needed  at  the  front. 
Electric  railway  journal,  v.  46,  p.  1120,  July  3,  1916. 

Sbows  how  many  women  are  being  employed  on  the  railroads  out  of  London. 
Women  in  motor  works.     Tramway  and  railway  world,  v.  40.  p.  440,  London, 

1916. 
Women  in  tramway  service.    Municipal  journal,  London,  v.  24,  p.  848,  Septem- 
ber 17,  1915. 
Women  railway  employees  in  England.    Railway  age  gazette,  v.  58,  p.  1120,  May 
28,  1915. 

A  short  article  with   a  few   illustrations  which  tells  of  the  work  of  women 
on  railroads  filling  such  positions  as  ticket  collectors,  dining  car  porters,  agents, 
etc. 
Women  tram  conductors  and  mail  carriers.     Commerce  reports,  p.  205,  April 

14,  1915. 
Woman's  work  in  war  time.    Literary  digest,  v.  50,  p.  1533,  June  26,  1915. 

Telling  of  the  work  being  done  by  British  women  on  the  railroads. 
Women  workers  and  locomotive  buildings.     Railw^ay  gazette,  v.  26,  p.  632-636, 

London,  1917,  illus. 
Women  worliers  in  railway  goods  sheds.  Midland  Railway.     Railway  gaz-ette, 
V.  26,  p.  660-665,  London,  1917,  illus. 

United  States. 

articles  in  periodicals. 

Baltimore  and  Ohio's  officers'  annual  meeting.     Railway  age  ga-zette,  v.  63,  p. 
24,  July  6,  1917. 

Speeches   by    Daniel    Willard   on    the   war    situation    and   on   employment   ©f 
women. 
Bready,   Stuart. 

The  employment  of  women  in  railroad  work.     Railway  age  gazette,  v.  63, 
p.  923-936,   November  23,  1917. 

The    railroad    work    of    women    in    Europe    and    United    States    and   a    table 
showing  by   occupations  and   months  the   number  of  females  employed  on  the 
Pennsylvania  Railroad  from  May  1,  1917,  to  September  1,  1917. 
Brooks,  F..  W. 

Female  substitutes  for  male  employees.     Electric  traction,  v.  13,  p.  686-688, 
October,   1917. 

The  work  which  women  can  do  in  connection  with  street  railways. 
The  draftswoman.     Railway  age  gazette,  v.  63,  p.  49,  July  13,  1917. 

The  results  of  substituting  women  for  men  in  drafting  work. 
The  employment  of  women   in   railroad   shops.     Roads   relieve  serious  labor 
shortage  by  hiring  women..    Notes  on  the  results  at  some  of  the  shops. 
Railway  age  gazette,  v.  63,  p.  989-991,  November  30,  1917. 
Employment    of    women    in    the    war    emergency.     Railway    age    gazette,    p. 
1407-1411,  June  22,  1917. 

Generalization  of  employment  of  women  on  railroads  with  detail  as  to  schools, 
the  skilled  and  unskilled  work  at  shops  and  the  English  experiences. 


WOMAN    IN    THE   WAR.  39 

Female  employment   on   the   Pennsylvania   railroad.     Railway    age  gazette,   v. 

61,  p.  172,  August  11,  1917. 
Go  slow  on  hiring  women  workers    (editorial).     Railway  age  gazette,  v.  63, 

p.  405-406,   September  7,  1917. 
Industry  recruits  women   into  the  ranks  of  labor.     Iron  trade  review,  v.  61, 

p.  132-133,  July  19,  1917. 
Leonard,  Oscar. 

"  Move  forward,  please."    Survey,  v.  39,  p.  561-562,  February  23,  191S. 

Some    unexpected    results    of    putting    women    conductors    on    tlie    St.    Loulg 
street   ears. 
Railroads  employing  female  labor.     Railway  review,  v.   60,  p.   772-773,  June 

2,  1917. 
Squires,  Benjamin  M. 
Women  street  railway  employees.     U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics.  Monthly 
review,  p.  1-22,  May,  1918. 
"  Step  lively,  please,"  in  soprano.     Survey,  v.  39,  p.  527,  February  9,  1918. 
SWARTZ.  Nelle. 

"  Help  wanted."     Survey,  v.  39,  p.  677-678,  March  23,  1918. 

Employment  of  woman   hy   transportation   companies  in   New   York. 
War  time  economies.    Electric  railway  journal,  v.  49,  p.  919-920,  May  19,  1917. 
Article    on    plan    for    trainmen    to    help    farmers.      Women    now    being    con- 
sidered   for    front    platform    duty.      England    is    now    seriously    considering    it. 
Scotland  has  found  it  most  satisfactory. 
Women  as  scrap-dock  employees.     New  York  central  railroad.     Railway  review, 

v.  61,  p.  94,  July  21,  1917. 
Women  conductors  on  surface  cars.     Electric  railway  journal,  v.  50,  p.  1075, 
December  15,  1917. 

The   plan   of   substituting  women   for   men   on   street   cars  in   New   York   and 
its  practical  application. 
Women  employees  in  the  mechanical  department.    Baltimore  &  Ohio.    Railway 

mechanical  engineer,  v.  91,  p.  359-360,  June,  1917. 
Women  for  St.  Louis  cars.     United  railways  advertise  for  women  for  tripper 
and  other  ruties.     Electric  railway  journal,  v.  50,  p.  1137,  December  22, 
1917. 

A   plan   to   put  women   on   cars  during   hours   work   of  morning  and   evening 
when  extra  cars  are  needed. 
Women  in  railroad  work  (editorial).    Railway  review,  v.  61,  p.  039-640,  Novem- 
ber 24,  1917. 
Women  in  railway  work.    Electric  railway  journal,  v.  50,  p.  455,  September  15, 

1917. 
Women  prove  successful  as  central  station  solicitors.     Electrical  world,  v.  69, 

p.  1068,  June  2,  1917. 
Women  start  well  in  railroad  work.     "  Can  do  anything,"  says  operating  chief. 

Public  service,  Chicago,  v.  23,  p.  143,  November,  1917. 
Women  street  c:r.-  conductors.    Life  and  labor,  v.  7,  p.  118,  June,  1918. 
Women  workers  in  railways.     Railway  age  gazette,  v.  63,  p.  323,  August  24, 
1917. 

PROFESSIONS    AND    SCIENCE. 

BOOKS. 

Daggett,  Mabel  Poti^er. 

Taking  title  in  the  professions.     (In  Women  wanted.     N.  Y.,  1918,  p.  239- 
279.)     Same.     Pictorial  review,  v.  19,  p.  22,  March,  1918. 


40  WOMAN    IN    THE    WAE. 

ARTICLES   IN    PEUIODICALS. 

Dental  mpr-hniius!.  n   now  profession  for  wonion.     AVomen's  pmployment.  v.  16. 

p.  S,  March  3,  191G. 
Electrical  engineering  for  women.     Bulletin,  League  for  business  opportunities 

for  women,  October,  1917. 
P'oKESTER,  Emily.  I;.  B. 

Analytical  chemistry  as  a  profession  for  women.     Englishwoman,  p.  126- 
134,  August,  1916. 

Some  of  the  opportunities  in  the  field  of  science  opened  to  women  since  the 
war.  A  brief  article  on  the  same  subject  in  Women's  employment  for  June  18, 
1915. 

Gradenvitz,  Alfred. 

Women  chemists  in  war  times.     Scientific  American,  v.  116,  p.  348,  April  7, 
1917. 
Haynes,  Dorothy. 

Chemistry  and  chemical   research   as  a  profession  for  women.     Women's 
employment,  v.  17,  p.  5,  December  21,  1917. 
MacDonald,  Margeret  B. 

A  service  call  to  scientific  college  women.     Journal  of  association  of  col- 
legiate alumnae,  v.  11,  p.  359-361,  February,  1918. 
Medical   women   and   the   universities.     Women's   employment,   v.   15,   p.   4r-6, 
July  2,  1915. 

New  demand  for  women  physicians. 
Patriotic  professions  for  women.     Public  health  work.     Women's  employment, 

V.  17,  p.  3,  July  6,  1917. 
Perry,  Alice  F. 

Engineering  and   its  possibilities   for   trained   women.     Women's  employ- 
ment, V.  15,  p.  4-5,  September  17,  1915. 
ScHARLiEB,  Mary. 

Increased  opportunities  for  medical  women.     Women's  employment,  v.  17, 
p.  3-4,  August  3,  1917. 
ScHARi.iEH,  Mary. 

Medical  women  and  the  war.     Women's  employment,  v.  15,  p.  5,  January 
1,  1915. 
Scouttar,  H.  S. 

War  work  of  our  doctors  and  nurses  in  the  field  of  war.    London  quarterly 
review,  v.  124,  p.  1-17,  July,  1915. 
Stephenson,  C.  H. 

Pharmacy  and  dispensing.     Women's  employment,  February  18,  1916. 
Demand  for  trained  women  to  take  the  place  of  men. 
Wider  outloolc  for  women  in  scientific  fields  due  to  war  conditions.     Bulletin, 
League  for  business  opportunities  for  women,  p.  5-11.  September,  1917. 
Women  and  science.     Women's  employment,  v.  17,  p.  6,  November  2,  1917. 
Needs  for  training  in  science. 

Women  architects.     Women's  employment,  v.  17,  p.  3,  August  17,  1917. 
Women  as  bacteriologists.    Women's  employment,  v.  16,  p.  4,  December  15, 1916. 
Women  engineer  students.     Engineering,  London,  v.  104,  p.  485-488,  November 
9,  1917. 

A  description  of  an  especially  equipped  factory  built  in  Scotland  for  the 
exclusive  employment  of  educated  women. 


WOMAN   IN   THE   WAR.  41 

MISCELLANEOUS    OCCUPATIONS. 

Great  Britain. 

books  and  pamphlets. 

Agreements  between  employers  and  work  people  with  regard  to  the  substitu- 
tion of  female  and  male  labor  in  industries  other  than  the  manufacture 
of  munitions.  U.  S.  consul,  Leeds,  England.  Reported  to  the  ministry 
of  labor  up  to  May  1,  1917.    9  p.,  May,  1917. 

Deals  with  the  woolen  and  worsted  industries.     General  and  sectional  agree- 
ments. 
Drake,  Barbard. 

Women  in  the  engineering  trades.  A  problem,  a  solution,  and  some  crit- 
icisms, being  a  report  based  on  an  enquiry  by  a  joint  committee  on  the 
Fabian  research  department  and  the  Fabian  women's  group,  London, 
George  Allen  &  Unwin,  1917. 

Summarized  in  U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics,  Monthly  review,  p.  156-1  GO, 
June,  1918. 
Employment  of  v/omen  in  retail  stores.     Great  Britain,  secretary  of  state  for 
home  department.     10  p.,  London,  1915.     Reports  of  the  shops  commit- 
tee appointed  to  consider  conditions  of  retail  trade  which  can  best  secure 
that  the  further  enlistment  of  men  or  other  employment  in  other  national 
services  may  not  interfere  with  the  operations  of  that  trade. 
Survey  in  U.  S.  Monthly  review,  July,  1916,  p.  162-163. 
Report  on  the  substitution  of  female  for  male  labor  in  the  Leeds  woolen  and 
worsted  district.    U.  S.  consul,  Leeds,  England,  October,  1917,  10  p. 

Gives  a  complete  list  of  processes  in  which  women  have  been  found  successful 
substitutes  for  men,  as  well  as  a  dicussion  of  the  work,  character  of  training 
needed,  whether  work  of  women  is  satisfactory  or  not. 
A  series  of  reports  on  substitution  of  female  labor  in  British  textile  mills, 
from  the  American  consuls  in  different  parts  of  England  (by  the  Ameri- 
can consulate  general).    44  p.  type. 

Discusses  changes  brought  about  by  the  war.  number  of  women  employed, 
wages,  industrial  conditions,  processes,  extent  of  substitution,  character  of 
work. 

articles  in  periodicals. 

Allingham,  H.  W. 

Automobile  factories  should  use  more  female  labor.  Automobile,  v.  35,  p. 
816-818,  November  9,  1916. 

BUCKPITT,    L, 

Canteen  work.    Women's  employment,  v.  17,  p,  3,  February  2,  1917. 
Carpenter,  N.  J. 

Women  as  army  camp  cooks.    Women's  employment,  v.  16,  p.  4,  November 
3,  1916. 
Chubb,  William  I. 

Women  in  the  airplane  production.  (Great  Britain.)  American  machinist, 
v.  47,  p.  105-108,  October  25,  1917. 

Discussion  of  the  processes  performed. 
Chubb,  William  I. 

Women  and  machine  tools.    American  machinist.  N.  Y.,  v.  44,  p.  1057-1062, 
1916. 
The  cook  house.     Englishwoman,  p.  107-114,  February,  1916. 

Work  and  pay  of  women  in  war  camps  and  hospitals,  as  clerks,  laboratory 
assistants,  and  cooks. 


42  WOMAN    IN    THE   WAR. 

Dawson,  B.  E. 

Women  war-time  elerks.  Euglisliwonum,  p.  104-112,  No\-ember,  1917. 
Statistics  on  employment  sources  from  which  clerical  workers  are  drawn; 
after  war  problems. 

There  is  an  account  of  this  article  In  Women's  employment,  v.  17,  p.  4,  De- 
cember  7,   1917. 
The  emplojanent  of  women  as  grooms  and  riding  masters.    Three  horse  depots 
run  entirely  without  men.    Broad  arrow,  v.  95,  p.  701,  December  24,  1915. 
Employment  of  women  in  chemical  works.     Oil  and  color  trade  journal,  v.  50, 

p.  523-525,  London,  1916. 
The   employment   of  women   in   engineering   workshops.    Engineer,   v.   120,    p. 
181-182,  August  20,  1915. 

A  very  good  article  which  shows  the  excellent  work  being  done  by  English- 
women in  engineering  workshops. 
An  exhibition  of  women's  work  in  the  engineering  industry.     Automobile  engi- 
neer, London,  v.  7,  p.  96-86,  1917,  illus. 
GoRRiNGE,  E.  M.  V.  (Supt.  of  munitions  works  canteen). 

Canteen  work.     Suggestions  for  training  for  canteen  work.     Women's  em- 
ployment, V.  17,  p.  5,  September  21,  1917. 
Gas  works.     Substitution  of  women  for  enlisted  men.     Gas  engineer's  maga- 
zine and  gas  industries,  v.  32,  p.  276,  Birmingham,  1916. 
Green,  E.  Everett. 

The  school  of  woman  signalers.  World's  work,  London,  v.  28,  p.  117,  July, 
1916. 

HUMPHRYS,   N.    H. 

Women  in  English  gas  w-ork.     American  gas  emergency  journal,  v.  106,  p. 
505-506,  May  26,  1917. 
Murray,  Jessie  MacDonald. 

Woman  in  the  banking  world.     What  it  means  to  her  and  to  it.     Journal 
Canadian  bankers  association,  .July,  1916. 
Newman,  Thomas  C. 

Women  in  banks.     Englishwoman,  p.  42-45,  April,  1917. 

Discusses    aptitude   of   women    for    work    and    opportunity    in    England    after 
the  war. 
Steering,  E.  P, 

The  employment  of  women  in  forestry.  Englishwoman,  v,  215.  p.  223, 
June,  1915 ;  p.  241-246,  December,  1915. 

Considers  the  openings  for  women  in  both  the  manual  part  and  the  execu- 
tive side. 

TARPEY,    J.    T.    KiNGSLEY. 

Toy  making.     Women's  employment,  p.  4-5,  June  2,  1916. 
One  of  the  English   "  war  industries  "  for  women. 

Toy  making  in  a  country  village.     W^omen's  employment,  v.  17.  p.  4,  February 
2,  1917. 

Training   women   for   factory    work.     Ontario    commission    on    unemployment. 
Report  1916,  p.  172. 

War-time  clerk.     Women's  industrial  news,  p.  2-3,  October,  1917.     English  con- 
ditions. 

Wide  variety  of  duties  discharged  by  women  in  English  gas  works.    American 
gas  engineering  journal,  v.  106,  p.  505-506,  May  26,  1917, 

Women  as  ju:;tices  of  peace.     Contemporary  review,  September,  1917, 
Strongly  recommending  appointing  them. 

Women  as  successful  master  plumbers.     Domestic  engineering,  Chicago,  v.  73, 
p.  71-72,  1915. 

Women  at  work  in  gas  plants  in  England.    Gas  age,  v.  39,  p,  430,  April  16.  1917. 


WOMAN   IN   THE   WAR.  43 

Women  clay  washers  in  Cornwall.     Paper-maker,  v.  52,  p.  339,  London,  1916. 
Women  clerks  in  war  time.     Women's  industrial  news,  p.  60-68,  October,  1916. 
Women  in  English  electricity  works.    Electrical  review  and  western  electrician, 

V.  70,  p.  607,  April  14,  1917. 
Women  in  gas  offices.     Gas  journal,  v.  138,  p.  620-622,  London,  1917. 
Women  in  motor  works.     Tramway  and  railway  world,  v.  40,  p.  440.  London. 

1916. 
Women  in  pottery  works.     Pottery  gazette,  p.  1106,  October,  1915. 

Woman  signalers.  Women's  employment,  v.  16,  p.  22-24,  November  17,  1916. 
Volunteer  war  work. 

Women's  work  in  British  engineering  shops.  Indian  and  eastern  engineer,  v.  41, 
p.  5-7,  Calcutta.  1917  (illus.) 

Women's  work  in  aircraft  factories.  Women's  employment,  v.  17,  p.  4,  No- 
vember 16,  1917. 

Women  workers  in  the  iron  and  steel  industry.  Iron  and  coal  trades  review, 
V.  95,  p.  91,  London,  1917  (illus.) 

Women  workers  in  Cornish  china  clay  mines.  Paper-maker,  v.  52,  p.  53-55, 
London,  1917   (illus.) 

Women  workers  in  Great  Britain.    Gas  age,  v.  40,  p.  1,  July  2,  1917. 

United  States. 

"Airesses."  A  new  war  work  for  women.  Pictorial.  Independent,  v.  93.  p. 
348-349,  March  2,  1918. 

Pictures  of  girls  working  on  aeroplanes. 

Bank  training  for  women  in  Wall  street.  Banker's  magazine,  p.  493-494, 
October,  1917. 

"  Hello  girls  "  are  going  "  over  there  "  to  help  link  up  the  army's  nerve  oilers. 
Literary  digest,  v.  56,  p.  80,  April  6.  1918. 

The  telephone  girls  who  are  going  to  France. 

Outlook  for  women  in  the  banking  world.  Bulletin,  League  for  business  oppor- 
tunities for  women,  July,  1917. 

Processes  in  which  women  can  do  the  work  of  enlisted  men.  Corn  Exchange 
National  Bank,  Philadelphia.    29  p.  [1918]. 

Ready  for  war  call ;  motor  schools  and  classes  prepare.  Motor  age,  April  19, 
1917. 

The  woman  behind  the  maker.  Does  her  bit  in  making  motor  cars  plentiful  in 
the  land.    Motor  age,  v.  31,  p.  38^9,  Chicago,  March  8,  1917  (illus.). 

VlALL,  W.  A. 

Women  in  machine  tool  industry.    Iron  trade  review.  May  9,  1918. 
War  work  for  women.     Independent,  v.  94,  p.  220-221,  May  4,  1918. 

List  of  volunteer   and   paid   positions   open   to   women.      Revised   and   printed 
as   a   pamphlet   by   the   woman's   committee,    council   of   national   defense.    July, 
1918. 
Woman's  place  in  the  electrical  industry.     Electrical  world,  June  8,  1918. 
Woman's  work  in  the  world  war :  Motor  service  means  wider  opportunities  for 
those  who   can  not  fight.     Motor  age,   v.   31,   p.   32-33,   April   26,   1917 
(illus.). 
Women  and  banking.    Bankers  home  magazine,  p.  9-10,  November,  1917. 

Discusses  absorption  of  women  clerks  into  the  banking  and  trust  companies' 
service.      Deals    also    briefly    with    subject    of    women's    training    for    banking 
service. 
Women  coremakers  in  Massachusetts  foundries.     Iron  trade  review,  v.  60,  p. 

673-674. 
Women  in  the  express.    Wells  Fargo  messenger,  v.  6,  March,  1918. 


44  WOMAN   IN    THE   WAB. 

Women  in  the  industries.     How  far  can  she  go  and  what  does  her  presence 
there  mean?     Scientific  American,  v.  IIG,  p.  127,  February  3,  1917. 

Gives    special    reference    to    women    in    automobile    factories    in    the    United 
States. 

HEALTH  AND  PROTECTION  OF  WORKEBS. 

France, 
aeticles  in  periodicals 

Compulsory  arbitration  and  the  minimum  wage  in  the  munition  industry  in 

France.     U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics,  Monthly  review,  p.  3G0-'i64, 

March,  1917. 
Decrease  in  night  work  of  women  in  France.     U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics, 

Monthly  review,  p.  85-86,  March,  1918. 
French  trade  unions  ask  international  action  on  industrial  reforms.     Comlte 

iutersyndical  d'action  contre  I'exploitation  de  la  femme.     Life  and  labor, 

p.  179-180,  November,  1917. 

Objects  and  methods  of  committee  in  protecting  working  women. 

Free  Saturday  afternoon  for  women  in  clothing  trades.    Great  Britain,  Board  of 
trade,  Labour  gazette,  p.  238,  July,  1917. 

Abstract  of  new  French  law  concerning  women  workers. 

Ha  MP,  Pierre. 

War  and  the  French  working  women.     New  republic,  v.   15,  p.   145-147, 

June  1,  1918. 
"Le  semaine  anglaise"  is  spreading  in  France.     Demand  for  the  Saturday  half 

holiday  is  almost  universal — the  employers  are  giving  in.     Annalist,  v. 

2,  p.  10,  January  7,  1918. 
Measures  of  protection  for  working  mothers  in  France.     U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor 

statistics,  Monthly  review,  p.  39-41,  July,  1917. 
Precautions  to  be  observed  in  the  employment  of  female  labor  in  war  industries 

in  France.     U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics.  Monthly  review,  p.  69-73, 

January.  1918. 

Instructions  issued   by  the  minister   of  munitions  July   1,   1917. 

Saturday  half  holiday  for  women  in  clothing  trades  in  France.     U.  S.  Bureau 
of  labor  statistics,  Monthly  review,  p.  75,  January,  1918. 

Great  Britain. 

BOOKS  and  pamphlets. 

Fbaser,  Helen. 

The  protection  of  women  in  industry.     {In  Women  and  war  work,  p.  131- 
152.) 
Hours,  fatigue,  and  health  in  British  munitions  factories.     U.   S.  Bureau  of 
labor  statistics,  145  p.     Bulletin  No.  221,  April,  1917. 

Reprints    from   the   memoranda   of   the   British   health   of   munition    workers 
committee. 
Industrial  efficiency  and  fatigue  in  British  munition  factories.     Bulletin  No. 
230,  July,  1917.     U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics. 

Sections  on  female  labor  and  inquiry  into  the  health  of  women  engaged  in 
munition  factories. 
Interim    report    on    industrial    efficiency    and    fatigue    by    health    of   munition 
workers    committee.      Great    Britain,    Ministry    of    munitions.      121    p. 
London,  1917. 


WOMAN   IN    THE    WAR.  45 

Kent,  A.  F.  S. 

Interim  report  on  an  investigation  of  industrial  fatigue  by  physiological 

methods.    34  p.    Great  Britain,  Home  office,  1915,  London,  Govt. 
Second  interim  report  on  an  investigation  of  industrial  fatigue  by  physio- 
logical methods.     76  p.     Great  Britain,  Home  office,  1916,  London,  Govt. 
Protective  clothing  for  women  and  girl  workere  employed  in  factories  and  work 
shops.     [Pictorial  pamphlet.]     Prepared  by  Great  Britain,  Home  office, 
from  information  supplied  by  H.  M.  inspectors  of  factories.    15  p.    1917. 
U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics,  Monthly  review,  p.  945-947,  April,  1918. 
Proud,  E.  Dorothea. 

Welfare  work,  with  foreword  by  the  Right  Honorable  David  Lloyd  George. 
London,  Bell  &  Sons,  363  p.,  July,  1916.     Summarized  in  Monthly  review, 
p.  82-88,  December,  1916. 
Stone,  Gilbert,  ed. 

Women  war  workers.    Chapter  X,  Welfare  work.  p.  239-253. 
Welfare  supervision  memo.  No.  2  of  health  of  munition  workers  committee. 

7  p.     London,  1915. 
Welfare  work  in  British  munition  factories.    U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics, 
Bulletin  222,  April,  1917. 

Reprints  of  the  memoranda  of  the  British  Ijealth  of  munition  workers  com- 
mittee. 

ARTICLES   IN   PERIODICALS. 

DiACK,  Willi  Ait. 

Women  farm  workers  and  a  minimum  wage.     Englishwoman,  p.  190-195, 
June,  1917. 
Housing   of   women    munition   workers.      Women's   employment,    v.    16.    p.    8, 

August  4,  1916. 
Increased  wages  for  women  munition  workers  in  Great  Britain.     United  States 

Bureau  of  labor  statistics.  Monthly  review,  p.  83,  October,  1917. 
Markham,  Violet  R. 

Women  trade  unionists  and  the  war.    Women's  trade  union  review,  p.  10- 
17,  July,  1915. 

Same  number  contains  questions  in  parliament  regarding  women's  war  work. 
MEIIiXE,    Wilma. 

Welfare  work  in  its  proper  place.     New  statesman,  v.  9,  p.  582-584,  Sep- 
tember 22,  1917. 

A  criticism  of  welfare  work  as  it  is  carried  on  in  the  majority  of  munition 
factories  in  England. 
Overworked  women  ;  M.  L.  G.     Englishwoman,  p.  1-12,  October,  1917. 
Sanger,  Sophy. 

Health   of  munition   workers.     Women's  industrial    news,   p.   12-18,    July, 
1917. 

Review  of  the  reports  of  the  health  of  munitions  workers  committee. 
Wages  of  women  munition  workers.     Women's  trade  union  review,  p.  6-16, 
July,  1916. 

Also  questions  in  parliament  on  women  munition  workers. 
War-time  raids  on  labor.    Literary  digest,  p.  1813,  June  16,  1917. 
War,  women,  wages,  and  munitions.     Survey,  v.  35,  p.  692-693,  March  11,  1916. 
Discusses  effectiveness  of  the  rules  formulated  by  the  munitions  labor  supply 
committee   and   the   recommendations   of  the    hoaith    of   munition   workers   com- 
mittee. 
Welfare  work  up  to  date.     Women's  einploynunit.  v.  16,  \^.  4.  Soiitembor  1.  1916. 
West,  Rebecca. 

Mothering  the  munition  maker.     New  rejuiblic,  v.  12,  p.  266-269,  298-300, 
October  6,  13,  1917. 


46  WOMAN   IN    THE    WAR. 

Women  and  the  munitions  act.     Women's  trades  union  review,  p.  7-10,  July, 

1917. 
Women  in  the  munition  courts.     Englishwoman,  p.  213-221,  March,  1917. 
AVomen's  wages  in  munition  factories  in  Great  Britain.     U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor 

statistics,  Monthly  review,  p.  119-128,  August,  1917. 

HEALTH  AND  PROTECTION   OP   WORKERS. 

United  States. 

articles  in  periodicals. 

Bru^ke,  R.  W. 

Manufactured  science;  discussion  of  influence  of  hours  upon  health  and 
efficiency.    New  republic,  v.  15,  p.  104-106,  May  25,  1918. 
Chamberlain,  Mary. 

Woman  and  w^ar  work.     Survey,  May  19,  1917. 

Discusses  national  plans  for  the  protection  of  women  workers  in  the  United 
States  during  war  time.  Advocates  federal  regulation  and  supervision  of 
hours  of  wor"k. 
Committee  on  women  in  industry  of  the  advisory  commission  of  the  council 
of  national  defense.  Standards  for  the  employment  of  women  in 
work  on  war  supplies  as  submitted  to  the  advisory  commission  of 
the  council  of  national  defense.  Leaflet  released,  February  19,  1918. 
GoLDMARK,  .Josephine. 

Some  considerations  affecting  the  replacement  of  men  by  women  workers. 
U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics,  Monthly  review,  p.  56-64,  January,  1918. 
Hamilton,  Alice. 

Industrial  poisons  used  or  produced  in  the  manufacture  of  explosives. 
141  p.  U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics,  Bulletin  No.  219,  1917. 
Keeping  up  industrial  standards.  Survey,  p.  97,  October  27,  1917.  Massa- 
chusetts war  emergency  committee. 
Labor  laws  in  war  time.  Special  bulletin.  No.  1,  April,  1917;  No.  2,  June, 
1917;  No.  3,  January,  1918;  No.  4,  May,  1918.  American  association 
for  labor  legislation,  N.  Y. 

Outlines    program    for    protection    of   industrial    standards. 
Maintenance  of  industrial  standards.     U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics.  Monthly 
review,  p.  807-809,  June,  1917. 

Resolution  adopted  at  meeting  of  executive  committee  on  labor  as  approved 
by  the  advisory  committee  of  the  council  of  national  defense. 
Norton,  Esther. 

Women  in  war  industries.    New  republic,  p.  170-181,  December  15,  1917. 

Some   of   the   new   industrial   fields   being   opened   to   women   In   the    United 
States.     Article   chiefly  devoted  to  protection   of  women  workers. 
New  hazards  in  new  jobs  for  women.     Survey,  v.  39,  p.  452-453,  January  19, 

1918. 

Report  of  a  conference  on  maintaining  labor  standards  in  war  time   called 
by  the  women's  trade  union  league  of  New  York. 
Program  for  labor.    New  republic,  p.  312-313,  April,  1917. 

Need   for   protecting   labor   in   the   United    States   as   shown    by   English   ex- 
perience. 
Protection  of  labor  standards.     U.  S.  Bureau  of  labor  statistics,  Monthly  re- 
view, p.  647-661,  May,  1017. 

Organizations  and  individuals  interested  in  safeguarding  existing  labor  stand- 
ards. Membership  of  committee  of  labor  of  council  of  national  defense.  Labor 
laws  in  war  time.  Recommendations  of  American  association  for  labor  legisla- 
tion,   children's   bureau,    and    national    consumer's   league. 


WOMAN    IN    THE    WAR.  •  47 

Shelter  for  workers  and  profiteering.     Survey,  v.  40,  p.  434-435,  July  13,  191 S. 
Spencee,  Edna  Lawrence. 

The  industrial  emergency  and  how  to  meet  it.    Massachusetts  club  women, 
p.  8-10,  October,  1917. 

What  Massachusetts  is  doing  and  can  do  to  maintain  protective  standards. 
Standards   for   employment   of   women    on   war    supplies.     December   1,    1917. 

Committee  on  women  in  industry,  council  of  national  defense. 
Suggestions  for  arsenal  commanders  and  manufacturers  contained  in  general 
orders,  No.  13,  Office  of  chief  of  ordnance,  Washington,  D.  C.     Novem- 
ber 15,  1917. 

Standards    for  employment   of   women   and   children.     Summarized   in   U.    S. 
Bureau  of  labor  statistics,  Monthly  review,  p.  51-53,  December,  1917. 
Surgical  view  of  women's  fitness  for  war  work.     Literary  digest,  v.  56,  p.  21, 
April  13,  1918. 

A  summary   of  pamphlet  "  Women  in  railway  service  as  viewed  from  surgi- 
cal standpoint,"  by  Dr.  E.  O'Neil  Kane. 
Weakly,  Frank  E. 

Equal  pay  for  equal  work.     The  Efficiency  magazine,  v.  9,  p.  104-110,  De- 
cember, 1917. 

Based  on  English  experiences. 
Women  munition  workers  and  their  pay.    Survey,  v.  37,  p.  665,  Marcli  10,  1917. 

Discusses  the  question  of  equal  pay  for  equal  work. 
Women's  work  in  war  time.    Consumer's  league  of  Massachusetts,  Bulletin  No. 
14,  4  p.,  November,  i917. 

How  the  league  is  trying  to  safeguard  the  interests  of  working  women  and 
maintain  existing  labor  standards  in  the  stress  of  war  dismands. 
Women  workei*s  on  railways.     Railway  age  gazette,  v.  63,  p.  232,  August  24, 
1917. 

A  plea   for   suitable  rest  rooms   for   women   workers. 

CHILD  WELFARE. 

Belgium  and  Prance. 

BOOKS  AND  PAMPHLP:TS. 

Kellogg,  Charlotte. 

Child    welfare.      (In   Women    of    Belgium.     New    York,    1017,    chnps.    3-6, 
10-13.) 

The  work  in  Europe  of  the  American  Red  Cross.  A  report  to  the  American 
people  by  the  Red  Cross  war  council,  September  1,  1917.  See  p.  32-34 
for  child  welfare  work  in  France. 

The  work  of  the  American  Red  Cross.  Report  by  the  war  council  of  appropria- 
tions and  activities  from  outbreak  of  war  to  November  1,  1917.  See  p. 
110-112  for  child  welfare  work  for  French  childien.  See  p.  121  for  Bel- 
gian children. 

Feance,  Italy,  and  Germany, 

AETICLES  in  PERIODICALS. 

Henderson,  Ernest  Flagg. 

War   orphans   and    child   welfare   in    Germany.      Survey,    v.    40,   p.    39-41, 
April  13,  1918. 
Juvenile  crime.     Social  service  review,  v.  6,  p.  13,  September,  1917. 

The  effect  of  tlie  war  upon  juvenile  crime  in  France  and  Germany, 


48  WOMAN    IN    THE    WAR. 

Orphans  of  French  soldiers.    Outlook,  v.  114,  p.  402,  1916. 

Tells  of  the  organizations  which  are  helping  tUeni. 
Orphans  of  Italian  soldiers.    Outlook,  v.  114,  p.  484^485,  1916. 

Describes  the  work  of  the  opera  uazionale  per  gli  orfani  do!  contadini  mortl 
in  guerra. 
Saving  the  children  of  PYance.    Literary  digest,  v.  52,  p.  644-645,  1916. 

Describes  the  work  of  the  Orphelinat  des  Armees. 
TowNE,  Arthue  W. 

France  adopts  her  war  orphans.     Survey,  v.  39,  p.  7-9,  October  6,  1917. 

A  discussion  of  the  law  enacted  for  the  adoption  of  war  orphans  as  wards 
of  the  nation. 

Great  Britain. 

books  and  pamphlets. 

Andrews,  Isabel  Osgood. 

Economic  effects  of  the  war  upon  women  and  children  in  Great  Britain. 
N.  Y.,  Oxford  University  press,  190  p.,  1918. 
Board  of  education. 

School  attendance  and  employment  in  agriculture.  Summary  of  returns 
supplied  by  county  local  education  authorities  of  children  excused  from 
school  for  employment  in  agriculture  on  31st  of  May,  1916. 
School  attendance  and  employment  in  agriculture.  Summary  of  returns 
supplied  by  local  education  authorities  for  the  period  1st  September,  1914. 
to  31st  January,  1915. 
Rochester,  Anna. 

Child  labor  in  warring  countries.    A  brief  review  of  foreign  reports.    Chil- 
dren's bureau,  United  State-  Dept.  of  labor  industrial  series  No.  4. 
Bureau  publication  No.  27,  1917. 

articles  in  periodicals. 

American  relief  for  English  and  German  girls.    Nation,  v.  100.  p.  590-591,  1915. 

Describes  the  work  of  the  international  women's  relief  committee. 
Baden-Powell,  Lady  Ola\'e. 

The  girl  guide  movement.     Charity  organization  review,  v.  42,  p.  225-232, 
December,  1917. 
Barnes,  Annie  E. 

The  unmarried   mother  and  her  child.     Contemporary  review,  v.   112,  p. 
556-559,  November,  1917. 

The  "immediate  problem  of  what  is  to  be  done  with  individual  infants  for 
whom  no  home  can  be  found,''  as  brought  forward  by  present  war  conditions. 
Chapman,  Cecil  M. 

War  and  criminality.     Sociological  review,  v.  9,  p.  79-87,  spring,  1917. 

See  p.   79-82   for  the  effect  of  the  war  upon  the  criminality   of   children   in 
the  United  Kingdom. 
The  child  and  the  war.     Spectator  (London),  p.  288,  September  22,  1917. 

A  discussion  of  the  psychological  effect  of  the  war  upon  the  child. 
Cotton,  recruiting  and  the  school  age.     New  statesman,  v.  7,  p.  31-32,  1916. 
Argues  against  the  lowering  of  the  school  age  in  Great  Britain. 

Education  of  war  orphans  in  Great  Britain.     School  and  society,  v.  4,  p.  775- 

776,  1916. 
Fox,  Mildred. 

Saving  the  babies.     Nation  (London),  v.  20,  p.  529,  1917. 
Tells  of  the  schools  for  mothers. 


WOMAN   IN   THE   WAE.  49 

Hattie,  W.  H.  M.  D. 

Some  medico-sociological  problems  arising  out  of  the  war.  Public  health 
journal  (Canadian  public  health  association),  v.  8,  p.  254-259,  October, 
1917. 

See  p.   255   for   the   effect  of   the  war   upon   the  birth  rate   and   the  Infant 
death  rate  of  the  belligerent  countries.     See  p.  256  for  the  effect  upon  juvenUe 
delinquency  in  Great  Britain  and  Canada. 
Hill,  I.  N. 

The  London  county  council  scheme  of  after  care;  some  further  thoughts. 
Charity  organization  review,  v.  42.  p.  232-236,  September,  1917. 
The  ideal  functions  of  care  committees. 
HUTCHINS,  B.   L. 

Report  on  iudustry  and  motherhood  inquiry.     Part  I.  The  development  of 
opinion  on  the  relation  of  women's  employment  to  infantile  and  maternal 
mortality.     Women's  industrial  news  (London),  p.  4-18,  October,  1917. 
A  summary  of  English  research  on  the  subject,  chronologically  considered. 
Jevons,  H.  W. 

The  London  county  council  scheme  for  after-care  work.  Charity  organi- 
zation review,  v.  42,  p.  96-100,  September,  1917. 

The  supervision  of  children  upon  entering  industry. 
Newsholme,  Aethub. 

The  enemies  of  child  life.     Nineteenth  century,  v.  83,  p.  76-98,  January, 
1918. 
Lane,  W.  D. 

The  children's  bit  in  the  war.     Survey,  v.  37,  p.  520-526,  February  3,  1917. 
Tells  what  the  first  two  years  of  the  war  have  meant  to  the  schools  and  the 
school  children  in  England. 
Pearson,  Arthub. 

Blinded  soldiers'  children.     Spectator  (London),  September  22,  1917,  p.  296. 
The    blinded    soldiers'    children    fund    for    children    born    later    than    nine 
months  after  the  soldiers'  discharge. 
The  war  and  the  school  child  in  England.     School  and  society,  v.  6,  p.  682-683, 
December  8,  1917. 

The   reduction   of   the    school    medical   service   under   war   pressure   and   the 
mistake. 

United  States. 

books  and  pamphlets. 

Children's  bureau,  U.  S.  Dept.  of  labor.     Fifth  annual  report,  1917.     See  p. 
49-50  for  a  "  brief  wartime  program  "  for  child  welfare  in  the  United 
States. 
Children  in  food  production.     National  child  labor  committee.     Pamphlet  No. 
277,  (revised)  No.  1917. 

A  summary  of  the  results  of  the  use  of  children  in  food  production  in  the 
United  States  in  1917,  with  suggestions  for  the  coming  year. 
LovEJOY,  Owen  R. 

Safeguarding  childhood  in  war  and  peace.     National  child  labor  commis- 
sion pamphlet  No.  278,  May,  1917. 
What  shall  we  do  for  the  children  in  time  of  war?    National  child  labor  com- 
mittee pamphlet  No.  276,  April,  1917. 

An   outline  of   European   experience  and   a   plea   for   safeguarding   American 
children. 

ARTICLES    IN    PERIODICALS. 

Adult  and  juvenile  delinquency.    Literary  digest,  v.  56.  p.  32,  February  16,  1918. 
The  effect  of  the  war  upon  delinquency  as  observed  in  the  criminal  statistics 
of  New  York  state  for  the  past  year. 
Babies  in  war  time  and  after.    Survey,  v.  38,  p.  27-28,  October  6.  1917. 

The   child    welfare   plan    of   the   Massachusetts    state   department   of   health. 


50  WOMAN   IN    THE   WAB. 

Beoymis,  Mrs.  H.  D. 

Child  welfare  and  the  war.    Social  service  news,  v.  1,  p.  93,  June,  1917. 
BuTTENHEiM,  Mrs.  H,  S.     Campaigning  to  save  100,000  babies  as  a  war  measure. 

American  city,  v.  18,  p.  238-340,  March,  1918. 
Ohapin,  Henry  Dwight,  M.  D. 

The  national  danger  from  defective  development  of  growing  children  in 
time  of  war.  Medical  record,  v.  93,  p.  89-91,  125-127  (discussion),  Jan- 
uary 19,  1918. 

The  problem  of  undernourishment  in  children. 
Children  in  war  time.     Children's  bureau,  U.  S.  Dept.  of  labor.     Issued  April 
10,  April  30,  May  26,  June  and  September  16,  1917. 

Special  articles  on  the  extra  need  of  caring  for  children  in  war  time. 
Children's   war   work   should   be   educative   as   well    as   productive.     Manual 

training,  v.  19,  p.  20-21,  September,  1917. 
Dewey,  John. 

Enlistment  for   the   farm.     Columbia   war  papers,    series   1.   No.   1,   New 
Yorlv  division  of  intelligence  and  publicity  of  Columbia  university,  1917. 
A  message  to  school  boards,  principals,  and  teachers  on  the  advantages  of  the 
enlistment  of  school  children  in  farm  work. 
Education  during  the  war.    Social  service  review,  v.  6,  p.  12,  September,  1917. 

A  digest  of  the  appeal  from  the  U.  S.  Commissioner  of  education  for  regular 
school  attendance. 
Educational  standards  in  war  time.     School  and  society,  v.  6,  p.  706-707,  De- 
cember 15.  1917. 

A  statement  of  standards  are  prepared  by  Frank  M.  Leavitt  for  the  national 
child  labor  committee. 
Gallivan,  Dr.  W.  J. 

Conservation  of  child  life.  American  Journal  of  public  health,  v.  8,  p. 
37-39.  January,  1918. 

Plans  of  the  committee  on  child  conservation  of  Massachusetts. 
Geeene,  Mrs.  Charles  W. 

Child  welfare  in  war  time.    The  Missouri  woman,  v.  4.  p.  18,  March,  1918. 
Illinois  schoolboys  and  farms.     School  and  society,  v.  7,  p.  73-74,  January  19, 1918. 

The  plan  to  mobilize  high   school  boys  for   farm  work  in   1918. 
Lane,  Wtnthrop  D. 

Making  the  war  safe  for  childhood.  Survey,  v.  28,  p.  381-391,  418-420, 
451-454.  1917. 

Gives  surveys  of  child  welfare  in  war  time. 
Lathrop,  Julia  C. 

The  children's  bureau  in  war  time.  North  American  review,  v.  206,  p. 
734-746,  November,  1917. 

A  survey  of  its  research  work. 
LO\'EJOY,    O^VEN    R. 

Look  out  for  the  children.    Measures  for  the  safeguarding  of  young  America 
in  war  time.     England  now  correcting  mistakes  made  at  the  beginning 
of  the  war.     Red  Cross  magazine,  v.  12,  p.  543-548,  November,  1917. 
Child-labor  problems. 
McCbacken.  Elizabeth. 

The  public  health  nurse  in  war  time.  Social  service  review,  v.  6,  p.  15-16, 
October,  1917. 

Her  Important  service  in  the  preservation   of  child  life,  the  conservation   of 
motherhood,  and  the  care  of  tuberculosis  patients. 
Meigs,  Dr.  Grace  L. 

Infant  welfare  work  in  war  time.  Paper  read  at  the  national  conference 
of  charities  and  corrections,  June  9,  1917.  Reprint  from  American  Jour- 
nal of  diseases  of  children.  August,  1917,  v.  14,  p.  80-97.  American 
medical  association,  Chicago, 

Gives  the  special  features  of  the  work  In  the  different  countries. 


WOMAN   IN   THE   WAB.  51 

Nevhjj:,  Edith. 

Some  suggestions  for  the  care  of  widows  and  their  children.     Charity  or- 
ganization review,  v.  39,  p.  242-248,  1916. 

With  special  reference  to  war  widows  and  tlieir  cliildi-en. 
Peixotto,  Jessica  B. 

The  woman's  committee  and  the  children's  year.    General  federation  maga- 
zine, V.  17,  p.  17,  March,  1918. 
Public  school  enrollment  and  the  war.     School  and  society,  v.  7,  p.  134,  Febru- 
ary 2,  1918.  . 
A  state  program  for  war  service.     Survey,  v.  38,  p.  528,  September  15,  1917. 

A    brief    article    containing    arguments    against    building    soldiers'    orphans' 
homes  after  the  war. 
Securing  the  babies  their  chance.     Survey,  v.  39,  p.  98-99,  October  27,  1917. 

A  report  of  the  eighth  annual  gathering  of  the  national  association  for  the 
study  and  prevention  of  infant  mortality. 
Theiss,  Lewis  E. 

The  price  of  milk  and  the  value  of  babies'  lives.     Outlook,  v.  117,  p.  572, 
December  5,  1917. 

The   increased   infant  death  rate   in   the   United   States  and   the   probability 
that  "cities  may  have  to  take  steps  looking  to  the  supplying  of  milk." 
To  save  100,000  baby  lives  this  year.     Survey,  v.  39,  p.  530,  February  9,  1918. 
Plans  announced  by  the  federal  children's  bureau. 

War's  emphasis  on  the  health  of  our  children.     Social  service  review,  v.  7, 
p.  15-18,  May,  1918. 

The  program  of  the  children's  year. 

LIST    OF     CHLLDREN'S    BUREAU    PUBLICATIONS    FOB    THE     CHILDREN'S     YEAR. 

Children's  Year,  general. 
Child-welfare  exhibits:  Types  and  preparation.  Bureau  publication  No.  14. 
I.  Public  protection  of  motherSy  infants,  and  young  children. 

(1)  Bulletins  addressed  to  the  individual  mother  and  telling  her  how  to  care 

for  herself  during  pregnancy  and  for  her  children  under  6  years  of  age. 
Prenatal  care.  Bureau  publication  No.  4. 
Infant  care.  Bureau  publication  No.  8. 
Child  care.  Bureau  publication  No.  30. 
Milk:  The  indispensable  food  for  children.  Bureau  publication  No.  35. 

(2)  Bulletins  concerned  with  social  measures  especially  affecting  infant  wel- 

fare and  the  health  of  children. 

Birth    registration :    An    aid    in    protecting  the   lives   and    rights   of 

children,  Bureau  publication  No.  2. 
New  Zealand   society  for  the  health   of  women   and  children:    An 

example  of  methods  of  baby-saving  work  in  small  towns  and  rural 

districts,  Bureau  publication  No.  6. 
Baby  week  campaigns  (revised  edition),  Bureau  publication  No.  15. 

A  tabular  statement  of  infant- welfare  work  by  public  and  private 

agencies  in  the  United  States,  Bureau  publication  No.  16. 
How  to  conduct  a  children's  health  conference,  Bureau  publication 

No.  23. 
Infant  welfare  work  in  war  time.  Reprint  from  American  journal  of 

diseases  of  children. 


52  WOMAN    IN    THE    WAIL 

(3)  Bulletins  discussing  causes  of  mortality  and  briefly  describing  social 
measures  to  promote  the  health  of  mothers  and  young  children. 

Infant  mortality :  Results  of  a  field  study  in  Johnstown,  Pa.,  based 

on  bli'ths  in  one  calendar  year,  Bureau  publication  No.  9. 
Infant  mortality,  Montclair,  N.  J. :  A  study  of  infant  mortality  ii*  a 

suburban    community,    Bureau    publication    No.    11. 
Maternal   mortality   from   all   conditions   connected   with   childbirth 

in  the  United  States  and  certain  other  countries,  Bureau  publica- 
tion No.  19. 
Infant  mortality:   Results  of  a  field  study  in  Manchester,   N.  H., 

based  on  births  in  one  year,  Bureau  publication  No.  20. 
Infant  mortality :  Results  of  a  field  study  in  Waterbury,  Conn.,  based 

on  births  in  one  year.  Bureau  publication  No.  29, 
Maternity   and   infant  care  in  a   rural   county   in  Kansas,   Bureau 

publication  No.  26. 

II.  Home  care  and  income. 

Care  of  dependents  of  enlisted  men  in  Canada,  Bureau  publication  No.  25. 

Governmental  provisions  in  the  United  States  and  foreign  countries  for  mem- 
bers of  the  military  forces  and  their  dependents,  Bureau  publication 
No.  28. 

Juvenile  delinquency  in  certain  warring  countries,  Bureau  pul^lication  No.  39. 

III.  Child  labor  and  education.  ^ 

Child-labor  legislation  in  the  United  States,  Bureau  publication  No.  10.  Bureau 
supply  of  complete  volume  is  exhausted,  but  reprints  from  the  above  can 
be  obtained  as  follows : 

Child-labor  legislation  in  the  United  States:  Separate  No.  1,  Ana- 
lytical tables. 
Child-labor  legislation  in  the  United  States :  Separates  Nos.  2  to  54, 

Text  of  laws  for  each  State  separately. 
Child-labor  legislation  in  the  United  States:  Separate  No.  55,  Text 
of  federal  child-labor  law. 
Summary  of  child-welfare  laws  passed  in  1916,  Bureau  publication  No.  21. 
Administration  of  child-labor  laws : 

Part   1.  Employment-certificate   system,    Connecticut,    Bureau    publication 

No.  12. 
Part   2.  Employment-certificate    system,    New    York,    Bureau    publication 
No.  17. 
List  of  references  on  child  labor.  Bureau  publicatian  No.  18. 

IV.  Recreation. 

Facilities  for  children's  play  in  the  District  of  Columbia,  Bureau  publication 

No.  22. 
Juvenile  delinquency  in  certain  warring  countries,  Bureau  publication  No.  39. 

V.  Children  in  need  of  special  care. 

A  social  study  of  mental  defectives  in  New  Castle  County,  Del.,  Bureau  publi- 
cation No.  24. 
Norwegian  laws  concerning  illegitimate  children.  Bureau  publication  No.  31. 


WOMAN   IN   THE   WAR.  53 

HEALTH  AlTD  RECREATION. 
Social  Hygiene. 

BOOKS     AND     PAMPHLETS. 

Allen,  Edward  Feank. 

Keeping  our  fighters  fit  for  war  and  after.    N.  Y.,  Century  co.,  1918. 
Committee  on  protective  work  for  girls.    A  pamplilet  issued  by  the  war  depart- 
ment commission  on  training  camp  activities,  1917. 

The  purpose  of  the  committee  and  its  methods  of  work. 
Committee  on  public  information.     National  service  handbook,  July  30,  1917. 
See  p.   155-162  for   "  Welfare  of  the  camps,"  giving  an  outliny  of  the  work 
of  the  most  important  organizations  in  the  United  States,  endeavoring  to  make 
camp  life  conditions  wholesome. 
Lundbeeg,  Emma  O. 

Illegitimacy  in  Europe  as  affected  by  the  war.     Reprints  of  reports  and 
addresses  of  the  national  conference  of  charities  and  corrections.  No. 
106,  1917. 
May.  Otto,  M.  D. 

The  prevention  of  venereal  diseases  in  the  army.    American  social  hygiene 
association,  publication  No.  61,  1916. 

A  discussion  and  classification  of  the  principal  means  of  prevention  used  in 
Great  Britain. 
Organization  suggestions  for  communities  near  military  camps.     American  so- 
cial hygiene  association,  publication  No.  109,  1917. 
Safeguarding  our  soldiers  from  venereal  diseases.     The  government  plan  and 
how  you  can  help.    A  leaflet  issued  by  the  council  of  national  defense, 
subcommittee  for  civilian   cooperation   in   combating  venereal   diseases, 
1917. 
The  story  of  the  red  triangle.     A  pamphlet  issued  by  the  national  war  work 
council  of  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  of  the  United  States,  and  of  the  work  of  the 
various  departments  and  bureaus,  together  with  a  discussion  of  the  op- 
portunities for  service  at  home  and  abroad. 
The  war  department  commission  on  training  camp  activities.     A  pamphlet  is- 
sued by  the  commission,  1917. 

A  resume  of  the  machinery  by  which  the  commission  is  accomplishing  its 
work  and  an  account  of  the  progress  made  along  each  particular  line  up  to 
Oct.  15,  1917. 

ARTICLES   IN   PERIODICALS. 

Advisory  committee,  method  of  attack  on  venereal  diseases.  An  outline  of 
activities  and  cooperating  agencies  planned  to  reduce  the  prevalence  of 
the  venereal  diseases  (United  States).  Social  hygiene,  v.  3,  p.  455-463, 
October,  1917. 

Social   and  medical  provisions. 
Boies,  Elizabeth. 

The  girls  on  the  border  and  what  they  did  for  the  militia.     Social  hygiene, 
V.  3,  p.  221-228,  April,  1917. 

The   work   of   the    Y.    W.    C.    A.   in    placing    upon    the   girls   of   the   Mexican 
border  the  responsibility  for  hospitality  to  the  visiting  troops. 
Chapman,  Cecil  M. 

War  and  criminality.     Sociological  review,  v.  9,  p.  79-87,  spring,  1917, 

See  p.  85-86  for  the  effect  of  the  war  upon  the  sexual  offenses  of  women 
tn  Great  Britain. 


54  WOMAN   IN   THE   WATL 

Cleaning  up  the  camp  cities  (United  States).     Survey,  v.  38,  p.  272,  June  23, 
1917. 

Reported    preliminary    returns    from    the    issuance    of    a    circular    letter    by 
Secretary  Baker. 
Clearing  up  behind  the  French  lines.     Survey,  v.  38,  p.  557,  September  29,  1917. 
The    work    and    plans    of    the   American    Government    for    dealing    with    the 
problem  of  social  sanitation  as  applied  to  her  soldiers  in  camp  and  on  leave. 
Community   war  recreation   service — its  meaning,   plan   of   work,    accomplish- 
ments  (United  States).     Playground,  v.  11,  p.  349-354,  October,  1917. 
CoNDiT,  Abbie. 

A  brief  statement  of  what  the  war  camp  community  recreation  service  is 
trying  to  do  (United  States).     Playground,  v.  11,  p.  394-429,  November, 
1917. 
Daniels,  Josephus. 

Venereal  disease  in  the  Navy    (United  States).     Social  hygiene,  v,  1,  p. 
480-485,  1915. 

A  plea  for  renewed  activity  in  moral  prophylaxis. 
Eddy,  Sherwood. 

With  our  soldiers  in  France.     Association  press.  New  York,  1917. 

The  work  of  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  for  Gen.  Pershing's  men  and  for  British  troops 
in  France. 
ExNER,  M.  J.,  M.  D. 

Prostitution  in  its  relation  to  the  army  on  the  Mexican  border.     Social 
hygiene,  v.  3,  p.  204-220,  April,  1917. 

What  the  experience  with  the  United  States  troops  on  the  Mexican  border 
shows  regarding  the  handling  of  the  problem  of  prostitution. 
For  a  government  board  of  social  hygiene.     Survey,  v.  40,  p.  403-404,  July  6, 

1918. 
The  girl  problem  in  the  communities  adjacent  to  military  camps.     Playground, 
V.  11,  p.  382-390,  October,  1917. 

Suggestions  for   possible  development  of  the   work   based  on   the  experience 
of  England. 
The  German  campaign  against  venereal  diseases.     Social  hygiene,  v.  3,  p.  415- 
416,  July,  1917. 

Rules  formulated  by  the  Prussian  medical  association. 
Hamilton,  Jean. 

War  service  from  the  national  league  of  women  workers  (United  States). 
Social  service  review,  v.  6,  p.  25,  November,  1917. 

Recreational  work  for  soldiers  and  sailors  and  for  young  working  girls. 
Johnson,  Bascom. 

What  some  communities  of  the  west  and   southwest  have  done  for   the 
protection   of   the   health   and   morals  of  soldiers  and   sailors    (United 
States).     Social  hygiene,  v.  3,  p.  487-503,  October,  1917. 
Keixogg,  Patil  U. 

Four  months  in  France.    An  interpretation  of  the  American  Red  Cross  III. 
The  work  for  soldiers.     Survey,  v.  39,  p.  282-286,  December  8,  1917. 
See  p.  286  for  recreational  work  for  soldiers. 
Lee,  Joseph. 

The  training  camp  commissions    (United  States).     Survey,  v.  39:  p.  3-7, 
October  6,  1917. 

A   discussion   of  tlie   work   of  the   army   commission   and   of   the   navy   com- 
mission. 
Lasker,  B. 

In  the  rookies'  playtime:  plans  for  the  recreation  of  soldiers  in  training 
(United  States).    Survey,  v.  38,  p.  137-138,  May  12,  1917. 


WOMAlsT   IN   THE   WAR.  55 

Lane,  Wintheop  D. 

Girls  and  Idiaki.     Some  practical  measures  of  protection  for  young  women 
In  time  of  war.     Survey,  v.  399,  p.  236-240,  December  1,  1917. 

An   article  based   upon   an   institute   conducted   at   the   New   York   school   of 
philanthrophy   bj'  Maude  E.  Miner  and  outlining  a  definite  program   for  both 
communities  and  workers. 
Miner,  Maud  E. 

The  girl  problem  in  war  time.     General  federation  magazine,  v.  17,  p.  13, 
May,  1918. 
Must  suppress  vice  resorts  near  army  camp.     Secretary  Baker  warns  mayors 
of  near-by  towns  and  county  sheriffs,  or  troops  may  be  moved.    Social  hy- 
giene bulletin,  p.  1-2,  August,  1917. 
Measures  for  prophylaxis  in  Germany.     Survey,  v.  35,  p.  71,  1915. 
•'News  from  our  o^^^l."    By  the  American  staff  correspondent  in  the  Stars  and 
Stripes.    With  an  account  of  Elsie  Janis's  work.    Red  Cross  magazine,  r. 
13,  p.  18-19,  illus.,  August  13,  1918. 
New  York  society  and  the  girl  scouts.  Social  hygiene  bulletin,  p.  1,  November,  1917. 
The  plan  to  interest  girls  living  near  the  army  camps  in  constructive  social 
and  civic  activities. 
The  New  York  society.    Social  hygiene  in  army  camps.    Social  hygiene  bulletin, 
p.  2,  December,  1917. 

The  social  hygiene  program  in   the   Rainbow  division  at  Camp  Mills,   Long 
Island. 
Pond,  B.  C. 

The  Y.  M.  C.  A.  at  the  front.     The  work  of  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  among  the 
armies  of  warring  nations — plans  for  the  welfare  of  American  troops 
abroad.    Red  Cross  magazine,  v.  12,  p.  529-533,  November,  1917. 
The  prevention  of  venereal  diseases  in  the  French  army.     Social  hygiene,  v. 
3,  p.  414-415,  July,  1917. 

The  creation  of  special  organizations   for  diagnosis  and   treatment. 
Prophylaxis  of  venereal  diseases  in  Prussia.     Social  hygiene,  v.  3,  p.  289-290, 
April,  1917. 

Free  consulting  dispensaries  for  sexual  diseases. 
Protecting  girls  in  army  zones.     Survey,  v.  39,  p.  323-324,  December,  1917. 
RiGGS,  Charles  E.,  M.  D. 

A  study  of  venereal  prophylaxis  in  the  navy.     An  analysis  of  results  ob- 
served at  the  naval  training  station,  Norfolk,  Va.     Social  hygiene,  v.  3, 
p.  299-312,  July,  1917. 
Sargeant,  Elizabeth  Shipley. 

Y.  M.  C,  A.  and  A.  E.  F.    New  republic,  v.  15,  p.  228-231,  June  22,  1918. 
Seymoltj,  Gertrude. 

Health  of  soldier  and  civilian,  II,    Venereal  disease  abroad.     Survey,  v.  39, 
p.  363-367.  December  29,  1917. 

A   r6sum6  of  war  experience  in   England,   Germany,   Austria-Hungary,    Italy, 
France,  and  Belgium. 
A  year's  war  program  in  social  hygiene.     General  federation  magazine,  v. 
17,  p.  33-37,  47,  May,  1918. 
Social  hygiene  in  war  time.     Social  hygiene  bulletin,  p.  1-3,  May,  1917. 

A  discussion  of  the  lines  of  activity  along  which  the  American  social  hygiene 
association  is  cooperating  with  the  United  States  governmental  agencies. 
Snow,  William  F.,  M.  D. 

Social  hygiene  and  the  war  (United  States).     Social  hygiene,  v.  3,  p.  417, 
450,  July,  1917. 

An  excellent  discus.sion  of  the  organizations  at  work  on  the  problem,  meas- 
ures under  military  and  under  civil  auspices,  and  problems  under  special  con- 
sideration, together  with  reproductions  of  official  news  items  and  official  let- 
tei-s  issued  up  to  .Tune  20.  IQll,  and  letters  from  various  organizations  show- 
ing their  plans  and  attitudes. 


56  WOMAN   IN    THE   WAR. 

Street,  Elwood. 

When  the  soldiers  come  to  town.    Survey,  v.  38,  p.  433-435,  August  18,  1917. 
A    discussion    of    the    plans    of    Charleston,    Columbia,    and    Spartanburg    to 
meet  the  leisure-time  needs  of  the  soldiers. 
Sex  questions  and  the  war.    Social  hygiene,  v.  2,  p.  627,  1916. 
Notes  on  Germany,  France,  Italy,  Holland,  and  Belgium. 
Simpson,  Chaki.es  E.,  M.  D. 

A  large  concentration  camp  in  its  relation  to  a  civilian  community.    Ameri- 
can Journal  of  public  health,  v.  7,  p.  806-812,  October,  1917. 

With  references  to  provisions  in  Massachusetts  for  the  care  of  soldiers  and 
civilians. 
Stuabt,  Suzette,  G. 

Your  uniform  is  your  pass.    Outlook,  v.  119,  p.  453-456,  July  17,  1918. 
Velthuijsen,  G-,  Jr. 

The  war  and  prostitution  in  Holland.    Social  hygiene,  v.  2,  p.  617-621,  1916. 
Venereal  diseases  in  the  Italian  army.     Social  hygiene,  v.  3,  p.  413-414,  July, 
1917. 

A  summary  of  prophylactic  measures. 
Venereal  disease  diagnostic  and  advisory  clinics  in  Germany.     Social  hygiene, 
V.  2,  p.  633,  1916. 

Regulations  regarding  discharged  soldiers  affected  with  venereal  diseases. 
War    camp    community    service.      A    nation-wide    experiment    in    friendliness 
(United  States).     Playground,  v.  11,  p.  481,  513,  January,  1918. 
The  growth  of  the  movement  and  its  accomplishments. 
With  the  United  States  troops  on  the  Mexican  border.     Social  hygiene,  v.  3, 
p.  154-155,  January,  1917. 

A  brief  account  of  the  methods  employed  by  the  Y.  M.   C.  A.  and  the  mili- 
tary authorities  to  prevent  the  spread  of  venereal  diseases. 
War  department  drives  vice  dens  from  camp  areas   (United  States).     Social 

hygiene  bulletin,  p.  1-2,  July,  1917. 
Wilson,  Helen. 

Constructive  social  hygiene  work  in  the  English  army  camps.     Tempta- 
tions of  the  camps.     Social  hygiene,  v.  1,  p.  499-502,  1915. 
What    Great    Britain    is    accomplishing.      Social    hygiene,    v.    3,    p.    407^12, 
July,  1917. 

Excerpts    of    the    venereal    disease    report    of    the    local    government    board, 
March,    1917. 
Williams,  Linsly,  R.  M.  D. 

England  makes  progress  in  combating  venereal  diseases.     Social  hygiene, 
V.  3,  p.  465-470,  October,  1917. 

A  brief  r6sum6  of  the  progress  since  the  beginning  of  the  war. 
The  war  and  venereal  diseases  in  Germany.     Social  hygiene,  v.  3,  p.  529-574, 
October,   1917. 

Papers  and   extracts   which  appeared   in  German  periodicals  in   1914,   1915, 
and   1916. 

Police  and  Patrols. 

BOOKS    and    pamphlets. 

Fbasek,  Helen. 

Patrols.     (In  Women  and  war  work.     N.  Y.,  p.  238-252.) 
Gleason,  Akthur. 

England's  policewomen.     (In  Inside  the  British  isles.     N.  Y.,  p.  154-172.) 
McLaren,  Bahbara. 

Commandant  Darner  Dawson,  Mrs.  Garden,  and  the  women  police  and  pa- 
trols.    (In  Women  of  the  war..    N.  Y.,  1918,  p.  74-78.) 
Sweeney,  George  F. 

Work  of  women  patrols  of  England.     N.  Y.,  National  special  aid  society. 


WOMAN   IN   THE   WAS,  57 

ABTICLES    IN    PEStlODICAUS. 

Bristol  training  scliool  for  women  patrols  and  police.    Woman's  employment,  v. 

16,  p.  6,  July  21,  1916. 
Camp  mothers  and  police  women  in  New  York.    Social  hygiene,  v.  3,  p.  595-596, 

October,  1917. 
Need  for  police  women.     Englishw^oman,  p.  103-111,  November,  1916, 

Policewomen  and   prejudices  appear  in   the   April,   1916,   issue   under   "  Prob- 
lems of  the  Day,"  p.  22-28. 
Peto,  D.  O.  G. 

The  training  of  women  police  and  women  patrols.    Englishwoman,  p.  22-27, 
October,  1916. 

Writer    is   director   of   the   Bristol    training   school    for    women    patrols    and 
police. 
RiCHAEDsoN,  Dorothy  M. 

Policewomen.     Women's  employment,  v.  15,  p.  4,  January  15,  1915. 
The  w^ork  of  Scottish  women  patrols.    Woman's  employment,  v.  16,  p.  8,  July 

7,  1916. 
The  work  of  the  woman  police  service.    Woman's  employment,  v.  16,  p.  7,  Feb- 
ruary 7,  1916. 

See  also  the  following  issues  : 
V.   16,  p.  6,  April  7,  1916. 
V.  17,  p.  4,  March  16,  1917. 
V.  17,  p.  5,  October   19,    1917. 
V.  17,  p.  5,  November  2,  1917. 
Women  police  service  in  England.    N.  Y.  times,  December  19,  1917. 

EDUCATIONAL  PROPAGANDA. 

Tlie  following  pamphlets  may  be  obtained  from  the  Department 
of  Educational  Propaganda,  Woman's  Committee,  1814  N  Street, 
Washington,  D.  C. : 

Problems  of  the  war.    A  suggestive  outline  for  study. 

Be  a  truth  teller.    Truth  series  No.  1,  August  15,  1918-date. 

These  series  will  be  issued   frequently   and   contain   a   terse   and   accurate   state- 
ment of  facts  about  the  war. 
Teaching  English  to  aliens.    Bulletin  No.  39.     Department  of  Education,  1918. 

A  bibliography  of  textbooks,  dictionaries,  glossaries,  and  aids  to  librarians. 
Publications  of  the  committee  on  public  information : 

How  the  war  came  to  America.      (Also  nine  foreign  translations.) 

The  battle  line'of  democracy.      (15  cents.) 

The  President's  flag-day  address. 

Conquest  and   Kultur. 

German  war  practices  :  Part  1. 

German  treatment  of  conquered  territory  :  Part  2. 

War,  labor,  and  peace  :  Recent  addres.ses  of  the  President, 

The  war  message  and  facts  behind  it. 

The  nation  in  arms. 

The  Government  of  Germany. 

The  great  war  :  From  spectator  to  participant 

A  war  of  self-defense. 

American  loyalty  :  By  citizens  of  German  descent. 

Amerikanische  buergertreue,  a  translation  of  American   loyalty. 

American  interest  in  popular  government  abroad. 

Home-reading  course  for  citiaen  soldiers. 

First  session  of  the  war  congress. 

The  German  war  code. 

American  and  allied  ideals. 

German  militarism  and  its  German  critics. 

The  war  for  peace. 

Why  America  fights  Germany. 


58  WOMAN  IN   THE   WAB. 

Publications  of  the  league  to  enforce  peace: 

The  menace  of  a  premature  peace.     An  address  by  William  Howard  Taft. 

The  war  and  world  organization.     An  address  by  W.  H.  Wadhams. 

Safeguarding  the  future.     By  A.  Lawrence  Lowell. 

Mobilizing  the  mind  of  America.     By  Charles  S.  Medbury. 

The  relationship  of  nations.     An  address  by  Virginia  C.  Gildersleeve. 

A  reference  book  for  speakers. 

Publications  of  the  chamber  of  commerce  of  the  United  States  of  America, 
on  Americanization.    29  West  Thirty-ninth  Street,  New  York. 


EDUCATION. 

Geeat  Bettain. 

books  and  pamphlets. 
Badley,  J.   H, 

Education  after  the  war.    Oxford,  Blackwell. 

Asks    that    the    school    system    be    thoroughly    overhauled    to    provide    among 
other  things   for    (1)    development  in   the   child   of   intelligent   cooperation   and 
capacity   for   self-government;    (2)    deepening   the   love  of   beauty   and   creative 
art. 
Dawson,  Wilmam  H.,  ed. 

After  war  problems.    N.  Y.,  Macmillan  co.,  1917,  366  p.    National  education, 
p.  79-110. 

ARTICLES   IN   PERIODICALS. 

Education  of  war  orphans  in  Great  Britain.     School  and  society,  v.  4,  p.  775- 
776,  1916. 

FORSANT,    O. 

Keeping  school  under  fire.     (France.)     Atlantic  monthly,   v.  121,  p.  247- 
255,  February,  1918. 
Lane,  W.  D. 

The  cliildren's  bit  in  the  war.     Survey,  v.  37,  p.  520-526,  February  3,  1917. 
Tells  what  the  first  two  years  of  war  have  meant  to  the  schools  and  school 
children   in  England. 
The  war  and  the  school  child  in  England.     School  and  society,  v.  6,  p.  682-683, 
December  8,  1917. 

The    reduction   of   the   school    medical    service   under   war    pressure,    and   the 
mistake. 

United  States. 

BOOKS  and  PAMPHLETS. 

Dean,  Arthur  H. 

Our  schools  in  war  time  and  after.     Boston,  Ginn  &  co.  (1918),  335  p. 
Hall,  G,  S. 

War  and  education.     {In  National  educational  association  journal  of  pro- 
ceedinsrs  and  addresses,  1916,  p.  86-92.) 
Russell,  J.  E. 

Possible  modifications  in  our  educational  work  likely  to  come  as  a  result 
of  the  great  war.     {In  National  educational  association  journal  of  pro- 
ceeding and  addresses,  1916,  p.  324-325.) 
U    S.  Bureau  of  education. 

Suggestions  for  the  conduct  of  educational   institutions  during  the  con- 
tinuance of  the  war.     Washington,  1917,  8  p. 
Secondary  schools  and  the  war.     Washington,  Government  printing  office, 
1918,  4  p.     (Secondary  school  circular  No.  1,  January,  1918.) 


WOMAN   IN   THE   WAB.  59 

ABTICLES    IN    TEEIODICALS. 
AI.EY,   R.   J. 

Cooperation  in  education.     School  and  society,  v.  6,  p.  31-35,  July  14,  1917. 
War  and  secondary  schools.     School  and  society,  v.  6,  p.  751-755,  Decem- 
ber 29,  1917. 
Baker,  T.  S. 

Education  and  the  war.    Kansas  teacher,  v.  6,  p.  7-9,  January,  1918. 
Bolton,  F.  E. 

Maintenance  of  standards  in  all  schools  as  a  necessary  element  of  pre- 
paredness.    School  and  society,  v.  6,  p.  301-307,  September  15,  1917. 
Beookins,  Florence. 

Helping  a  community  to  conserve.    Journal  of  home  economics,  v.  9,  p.  322- 
323,  July,  1917. 
Claxton,  p.  p. 

Education  and  the  war.     School  and  society,  v.  6,  p.  173-174,  August  11, 

1917. 
Government  policies  involving  the  schools  in  war  time.     Survey,  v.  39,  p. 
262-268,  March  9,  1918. 

A  statement  by  the  Commissioner  of  education  as  to  what  role  our  schools 
shall  play  in  ■war  time. 
What  the  schools  have  done  to  help  win  the  war.     Literary  digest,  v.  57, 
p.  25,  June  8,  1918. 

One  of  a  series  of  articles  prepared  by  U.  S.  Bureau  of  education,  designed 
for  high-school  use. 
Colleges  and  the  war.    Nation,  v.  104,  p.  651,  May  31,  1917. 
Corson,  O.  T. 

Teach  the  truth  about  Germany.    Ohio  educational  monthly,  v.  67,  p.  32-35, 
January,  1918. 
Dangers  of  the  war  situation.     Elementary  school  journal,  v.  17,  p.  617-621, 

May,  1917. 
Dean,  Arthur  D. 

Our  schools  in  war  time — and  after.    Teachers  college  record,  v.  19,  p.  1-14, 
January,  1918. 
Devine,  E.  T. 

War  program  of  education.     Survey,  v.  38,  p.  425,  August  11,  1917. 
Dun  LAP,  J.  Y. 

Teachers'  work  during  the  war  time.     Industrial  arts  magazine,  v.  5,  p. 
275-276,  June,  1916. 
Education  after  the  war.     School  and  society,  v.  4,  p.  332-334,  August  26,  1916. 
Education  during  the  war.     A  digest  of  the  appeal  from  the  commissioner  of 

education.     Social  service  review,  v.  6,  p.  12,  September,  1917. 
Education  standards  in  war  time.     School  and  society,  \.  6,  p.  700-707,  Decem- 
ber 15,  1917. 

A   statement   of   standards   prepared   by    Frank    M.   I-eavitt   for   the   national 
child  labor  committee. 
Fausey,  J.  R. 

Some  lessons  from  the  war.     Journal  of  education,  v.  84,  p.  289-290,  Sei> 
tember  28,  1916. 
Government  policies  involving  the  schools  in  war  time.     Survey,  v.  36,  p.  626- 

628,  March  9,  1918. 
Hall,  G.  S. 

Teaching  the  war.     Journal  of  education,  v.  84,  p.  74-75,  July  20,  1916. 
War  and  some  of  its  relations  to  education.     School  arud  society,  v.  4,  p. 
115-120,  July  22,  1916. 


60  WOMAN  IK   THE  WAB. 

HOPPEE,  A.  F. 

America's  patriotic  juniors.     Industrial  arts  magazine,  v.  7,  p.  1-3.  Janu- 
ary, 1918. 

What  the  schools  of  Plainfield,   N.  J.,  are  doing  to  aid  Uncle  Sam. 
How  the  war  has  affected  the  school.    Outlook,  v.  117,  p.  324,  October  31,  1917. 
Johnson,  H.  L. 

Club  programs  in  war  times.    Journal  of  home  economics,  v.  9,  p.  471-475, 
October,  1917. 
Kendalil,  C.  N. 

Commissioner  Kendall's  call  to  teachers  and  school  officials.    School  review, 
V.  25,  p.  602-605,  October,  1917. 
Kent,  Ernest  B. 

The  service  army — food  economy  and  the  elementary  school.     Industrial 
arts  magazine,  v.  6,  p.  281-282,  July,  1917. 
Keause,  C.  a. 

War  from  the  schoolroom  window :  a  comment.     Educational  review,  v.  52, 
p.  92-94,  June,  1916. 
Lane,  W.  D. 

School  and  child  labor.    Survey,  v.  38,  p.  383-386,  August  4,  1917. 
LOVEJOY,   O.   R. 

Safeguarding  childhood  in  peace  and  war.     Child  labor  bulletin,  v.  6,  p. 
72-79,   May,   1917.     pam.   278. 

A  plea  on  the  basis  of  the  harm  done  European  children  by  impaired  educa- 
tional systems  and  child  labor. 
LUGG,  C.  H. 

The  schools  and  the  war.     Associate  teacher,  v.  18,  p.  6-8,  January,  1918. 
An  abstract  of  the  state  superintendent's  address  before  the  South  Dakota 
educational  association. 
McCONNELL,    J.   M. 

The  great  war  and  the  teaching  of  European  history.     Virginia  high  school 
bulletin,  v.  2,  p.  25-31,  November,  1916. 

McCOEKXE,  C.  E. 

War  and  its  pedagogic  opportunities.    Educational  review,  v.  52,  p.  183-188, 
September,  1916. 
Maetin,  E.  S. 

Great  world  movie;  school  as  usual.     Good  housekeeping  magazine,  v.  65, 
p.  45,  September,  1917. 
Massachusetts  schools  and  the  war.     School  and  society,    v.    5,    p.    491-492, 

April  28,  1917. 
Mobilization  of  the  schools.     Manual  training  magazine,    v.    18,    p.    426-427, 

June,  1917. 
Patriotic  service.     Manual  training  magazine,  v.  18,  p.  425-427,  June,  1917. 
Public  schools  and  the  national  crisis.     Survey,  v.  37,  p.  723,  March  24,  1918. 
Smith,  P. 

Letter   to   Massachusetts   superintendents.      School   and   society,   v.   6,    p. 
358-359,  September  22,  1917. 
Wagnee,  J.  H.    Schools  to  win  the  war.    New  Mexico  journal  of  education,  v. 
14,  p.  4-6,  December,  1917. 

Address  of  the  New  Mexico  educational  association  convention. 

The  war  and  education.     Illinois  teacher,  v.  4,  p.  77,  January,  1916. 
War  and  education.    Educational  review,  v.  53,  p.  534-548,  May,  1917. 
War  at  expense  of  education.     Survey,  v.  36,  p.  303,  June  17,  1916. 
War  from  the  schoolroom  window:  four  points  of  view.     Educational  review, 
V.  51,  p.  511-521,  May,  1916. 


WOMAJSr   IN    THE   WAB.  61 

War's    disturbing    effect    upon    various    branches    of    education.     Education, 

V.  38,  p.  57-58,  September,  1917. 
Webee,  S.  E. 

The  American  school  in  the  present  wur.     Journal  of  education,  v.  86,  p. 
429-430,  November  1,  1917. 
West,  A.  F. 

Our  educational  birthright.    School  and  society,  v.  7,  p.  61-65,  January  19, 
1918. 
Welson,  W. 

Problems  of  community  and  national  life  in  the  schools.  School  and 
society,  v.  5,  p.  404,  October  6,  1917. 

COLLEGES    Ain)    THE    WAR. 

United  States. 

books  and  pamphlets. 
Bakeb,  Newton  D. 

The  war  and  the  colleges;  from  an  address  to  representatives  of  colleges 
and  universities,  delivered  at  Continental  hall,  Washington,  D.  C,  May 
5,  1917.  New  York  city,  American  Association  for  international  concilia- 
tion (1917),  14  p. 

HaEVARD   TjNrV'EESITT. 

Harvard  in  the  war.     (Boston?)  1917,  11  p. 
Iixnsrois  Univeesity. 

Response  of  the  university  of  Illinois  to  the  call  of  war.  Urbana,  Illinois, 
1917,  12  p.  University  of  Illinois  bulletin,  v.  xiv,  no.  52. 
National  association  of  state  universities  in  the  United  States  of  America. 
Transactions  and  proceedings,  v.  15,  1917.  A  special  meeting  held  at 
Washington,  D.  C,  May  4-5,  1917.  Grand  Forks,  N.  Dak.,  Grand  Forks 
Herald  co.,  1917,  130  p. 

A  meeting  of  the  presidents  of  colleges  and  universities  of  the  country  for 
the   purpc/se   of   considering  the   relation   of   these   institutions   to   the   various 
problems  of  the  war. 
PmsBTJBGH  University. 

The  university  and  the  war.    University  of  Pittsburgh  bulletin.  Official  se- 
ries, V.  14,  no.  1,  January  1,  1918. 
Strong,  Frank. 

The  opportunity  of  American  universities.     Lawrence,  Kans.,  1915  [10]  p. 
(University  of  Kansas  news  bulletin,  v.  xv,  no.  14.)     From  "  School  and 
society,"  January  23,  1915. 
War  work  of  women  in  colleges.    Committee  on  public  information,  Washington. 
No.  1,  11  p.,  January,  1918 ;  No.  2,  21  p.,  April  1,  1918. 

articles  in  periodicals. 
Cabot,  H. 

Harvard  surgical   unit   with  the   British   expeditionary   force  In   France. 
Harvard  graduate's  magazine,  v.  25,  p.  305-310,  March,  1917. 
College  mobilization.     Literary  digest,  v.  54,  p.  984-985,  April  7,  1917. 
CJolleges  and  the  war.  , 

Nation,  v.  104,  p.  651,  May  31,  1917. 
School  and  society,  v.  5,  p.  685-686,  June  6,"  1917. 
COOLIDGE,   C.  A.,  jr. 

Military   situation   at   Cambridge.     Harvard  graduate's   magazine,  t.   25. 
p.  493-496,  June,  1917. 
Course  for  soldiers  at  the  New  York  city  college.     School  and  society,  v.  5, 
p.  582-583,  May  19,  1917. 


62  WOMAN    IN    THE   WAS. 

Davtes,  Geoege  R. 

The  universities  and  the  war.  Quarterly  journal  of  the  university  of 
North  Dakota,  v.  8,  p.  44-49,  October,  1917. 

Johnson,  Ethel  M. 

War  emergency  courses.     Special  libraries,  v.  9,  p.  6-11,  January,  1918. 

LaFollette,  p.  F. 

Relief  work  by  the  colleges.     Nation,  v.  104,  p.  597-598,  May  17,  1917. 

Powell,   L.   P. 

Colleges  in  war  time.  American  review  of  reviews,  v.  56,  p.  297-299, 
September,  1917. 

Swain,  J.  W. 

College  and  the  war.    New  republic,  v.  12,  p.  221,  September  22,  1917. 

Teachers  college  and  war  work.    School  and  society,  v.  5,  p.  582,  May  19, 1917. 

Thornton,  William  M. 

The  relation  of  the  colleges  and  universities  of  the  south  to  the  national 
crisis.  Charlottesville,  Va.,  The  University  (1917),  p.  151-158.  (Uni- 
versity of  Virginia  record.  Extension  series,  v.  II,  no.  8-9,  April-May, 
1917.) 

Mobilizing  a  university.  Columbia  university  quarterly,  v.  19,  p.  285-289, 
June,  1917. 

Mobilizing  women  as  nurses.  The  Vassar  training  camp  for  nurses.  Literary 
digest,  V.  57.  p.  33,  April  27,  1918. 

Two  thousand  students  of  teachers  college  prepare  for  war.  Teachers  college 
record,  v.  18,  p.  288-290,  May,  1917. 

U.  S.  Bureau  of  education.  Work' of  American  colleges  and  universities  dur- 
ing the  war.  Washington,  Government  printing  office,  1917.  4  ▼. 
(Higher  education  circular,  no.  1-4.) 

University  and  preparedness.  University  of  Chicago  magazine,  v.  9,  p. 
229-233,  April,  1917. 

University  and  the  war.  University  of  Chicago  magazine,  v.  9,  p.  286-288, 
327-331,  May- June,  1917. 

War  service  by  the  colleges.     School  and  society,  v.  5,  p.  673,  June  9,  1917. 

Worcester  polytechnic  institute  and  the  war.  School  and  society,  v.  5,  p. 
565-567,  May  12,  1917. 

LIBERTY   LOAN. 

BOOKS  AND  PAMPHLETS. 

Handbook  for  s-peakers.  Third  liberty  loan.  Treasury  department,  Washing- 
ton, p.  55,  1918. 

Report  of  the  national  woman's  liberty  loan  committee  for  the  first  and  second 
liberty  loan  campaigns.     Treasury  department,  Washington,  p.  49,  1917. 

Second  liberty  loan  of  1917,  a  source  book.  Treasury  department,  Washington, 
1917.    See  p.  26-27,  Woman's  liberty  loan  committee. 

articles  in  peeiodicals. 
Baeton,  Bruce. 

Editorial.     Woman's  home  companion,  v.  45,  p.  2,  March,  1918. 
Isaacs,  Edith  J.  R. 

Talking  business  to  American  women.     McCall's  magazine,  v.  47,  p.  19, 

May,  1918. 
What  every  woman  should  know.    Ladies'  home  journal,  v.  35,  p.  34,  Feb- 
ruary, 1918. 
McAdoo,  William  G. 

An  appeal  to  American  women  (war  savings  and  thrift  stamps).  To-day*s 
housewife,  v.  13,  p.  3,  March,  1918. 


WOMAN   IN    THE   WAS.  53 

Official  bulletin. 

Woman's  liberty  loan  committee  organized  to  promote  sale  of  bonds.    May 

16,  1917,  p.  1. 
Nation  wide  activity  of  v/omen  imperative  for  success  of  liberty  loan  cam- 
paign.    June  2,  1917,  p.  5. 
Women's  work  in  behalf  of  liberty  loan  outlined  by  treasury  department. 

June  9,  1917,  p.  5. 
Women's  liberty  loan  committee  issues  api^eal  to  women.     June  12    1917 

p.  5. 
Organization  and  scope  of  operation  of  women's  liberty  loan  committee. 

July  28,  1917,  p.  2. 
Woman's  liberty  loan  committee  begins  nation  wide  campaign.    August  24, 

1917,  p.  2. 
Results  of  women's  work  for  the  third  liberty  loan.    April  12,  1918,  p.  7. 
Pratt,  Ruth  B.^cer. 

Coining  silver  bullets  for  democracy.    Harper's  bazaar,  v.  53,  p.  33,  April, 
1918. 
Synon,  Mary. 

Women  of  the  treasury  work  for  the  war.    What  they  have  done  for  Red 
Cross  and  liberty  loan.     Social  service  review,  v.  7,  p.  7-8,  20,  April,  1918. 
Third  liberty  loan  drive.    The  Woman  citizen,  p.  355,  March  30,  1918. 
Vanderltp,  Frank  A. 

Let  your  spare  change  help  win  the  war    (War  savings  stamps).     De- 
lineator, April,  1918. 


HOSPITAL  EXPERIENCES  AND  RELIEF  WORK. 
On  the  Western  Front. 

BOOKS   and   pamphlets, 

Barrow,  Kathleen  M.,  and  Anna  B.  de-M.  Cunynghame. 

How  women  can  help  the  wounded,  with  an  introduction  by  F.  M.  Sand- 
with.    London,  N.  Y.,  etc.,  Hodder  &  Stoughton,  1914. 

Sets  out  in  detail  the  many  agencies  in  need  of  help.     Manual  of  informa- 
tion for  women  wishing  to  cooperate  to  the  best  advantage. 
Beith,  J.  H. 

Getting  together.    N.  Y.,  Houghton  Mifflin  co.,  1917. 

This  little  book  of  Ian  Hay's  contains  slight  reference  to  the  relief  work  done 
by  American  women  for  the  allies. 
Blllington,  Mary  Frances. 

The  Red  Cross  in  war:  Woman's  part  in  the  relief  of  suffering.  London, 
New  York,  etc.,  Hodder  &  Stoughton,  1914,  190  p.  Daily  telegraph  war 
books. 

Describes  briefly  the  modern  methods  of  military   nursing  developed  during 
and   since   the    Boer   war.     Devoted    mainly    to    the   origin    of   the   British    Red 
Cross  and  Its  work  in  recent  years. 
Billington,  Mary  F. 

The  roll  call  of  serving  women.    A  record  of  women's  work  for  combatants 
and  sufferers  in  the  great  war.     Illus.    Religious  Tract  Society,  1915. 
A  record  of  the  organization  and  the  part  taken  by  the  first  volunteers. 
Boardman,  M.  T. 

Europe  and  war  and  the  American  Red  Cross.  (In  Under  the  Red  Cross 
flag  at  home  and  abroad,  N,  Y,,  1915,  p.  267-315.) 

An  account  of  the  work  of  the  Eed  Cross  in  Europe  immediately  following 
the  declaration  of  war. 


64  WOMAN    IN    THE   WAJB. 

Bowses,  Thekla. 

Britain's  civilian  volunteers.     Authorized  story  of  British  voluntary  aid 
detachment  work  in  the  great  war.    N.  Y.,  Moffat,  Yard  &  co.,  1917. 

Also  contains  comment  on  the  work  of  the  organization  in  allied   countries. 
BuuKE,  Kathleen. 

The  white  road  to  Verdun.    N.  Y.,  Geo.  H.  Doran  &  co.,  1916. 

Author  is  a   hospital   worker  and  some  of  the   chapters  contain   accounts  of 
woman's  work  for  the  relief  of  the  wounded. 
CaTOB,  DOfiOTHT. 

In  a  French  military  hospitaL    London,  New  York,  etc,  Longmans,  Green 
&  CO.,  1915. 

Personal  experiences, 
CooK,  Mrs.  Thornton. 

General  service  hints  for  V.  A.  D.  members.    Revised  by  Miss  Lilian  Denn- 
ler,  with  a  preface  by  Mrs.  Katharine  Furze.    Scientific  press,  ltd.,  p.  45. 
Diary  of  a  nursing  sister  on  the  western  front,  1914-1915.     London,  W.  Black- 
wood &  sons,  1915,  300  p. 

An  anonymous  account  of  the  experiences  of  an  English  nurse  while  serv- 
ing on  the  staff  of  a  general  hospital. 
Dixon,  Mrs.  Agnes  Margaeet. 

The  canteeners.    London,  J.  Murray,  1917,  175  p. 
Doty,  M.  Z. 

Nursing  the  wounded  in  Paris.     (In  Short  rations,  1917,  p.  53-67.) 
Gives  a  few  of  the  writer's  experiences  as  a  nurse  in  Paris. 
The  Edith  Cavell  nurse  from  Massachusetts.    Boston,  W.  A.  Butterfield  [1917], 

95  p. 

Letters  from  the  nurse  sent  to  the  front  as  a  memorial  to  Edith  Cavell,  by 
American  admirers. 
Eydoux-Demians,  M. 

In  a  French  hospital ;   notes  of  a  nurse.    Tr.  by  Betty  Yeomans.    New 
York,  Duffield  &  co.,  1915.    London,  T.  F.  Unwin,  ltd. 
FiNzi,  Kate  John. 

Eighteen  months  in  the  war  zone,  the  record  of  a  woman's  work  on  the 
western  front,  with  an  introduction  by  Major  General  Sir  Alfred  Tximer, 
K.  C.  B.     London,  N.  Y.,  etc,  Cassell  &  co.,  ltd.,  1916,  260  p. 
Fraseb,  Helen. 

Hospital,  Red  C5ross,  V.  A.  D.     (In  Women  and  war  work.    N.  Y.,  p.  53-70.) 
Gleason,  a.  H. 

Young  Hilda  at  the  wars.    A.  H.  Stokes,  N.  Y.,  1915. 

Description  of  the  experiences  of  the  writer  and  his  wife  while  serving  as 
nurses  in  one  of  the  ambulance  corps  in  Belgium. 
Gleason,  a.  H.,  and  Mrs.  H.  H. 

Golden  lads.    N.  Y.,  Century  co.,  1916. 

Containing  a   chapter   on   "  Women  under  fire "   and  another  on   "  how   war 
seems  to  a  woman." 
Letters  from  a  French  hospital.    N.  Y.,  Houghton  Mifflin  co. 

Written  by  an  English  girl  to  her  uncle  in  London. 
Lptingston,  St.  CLAm.  and  Steen-Hansen  Ingeborg. 

Under  three  flags,  with  the  Red  Cross  in  Belgium,  France,  and  Serbia. 
London,  Macmillan  &  co.,  ltd.,  1916,  238  p. 
MacNatjghton,  Sarah. 

A  woman's  diary  of  the  war.     N.  Y.,  E.  P.  Dutton  &  co.,  1916,  168  p. 

Miss  MacNaughton,  a  novelist,  joined  the  Red  Cross  at  the  beginning  of  the 
war  and    went  through    the   siege  and   evacuation   of   Antwerp. 
The  toll  of  war.    Nelson.  1915. 

Miss  MacNaughton  describes  her  own  experiences  as  a  Eed  Cross  worker  at 
Antwerp,  Turnes,  Poperinghe,  etc 


WOMAN    IN    THE   WAR.  65 

McDouGAix,  Grace. 

A  nurse  at  the  war.     N.  Y.,  R.  M.  McBride  &  co.,  1917.  203  p. 
Personal    experiences    of   nursing   In    Belgium    and    France. 
**  Mademoiselle  Miss  " ;  letters  from  an  American  girl  serving  with  the  rank 
of  lieutenant  in  a  French  army  hospital  at  the  front,  with  a  preface  by 
Dr.  Richard  C.  Cabot.    Boston,  W.  A.  Butterfield,  1916,  102  p. 
Maetin-Nicholson,  Sister. 

My  experience  on  three  fronts.     London,  Allen  &.  Unwin,  ltd.,  1916,  238  p. 
Mortimer,  Maud. 

A  green  tent  in  Flanders.    N.  Y.,  Doubleday  Page  &  co.,  1917,  242  p. 

Author  is  an  American  woman  who  served  as  a  director  of  a  field  hospital 
five  miles  from  the  firing  line  in  Belgium. 
Mutb,  Waed. 

Observations   of  an   orderly.     Glimpses   of  life   and   work   in  an  English 
war  hospital.    Simpkin  &  Marshall. 
Pbotheroe,  P]knest. 

A  noble  woman ;  life  story  of  Edith  Cavell.    London,  Kelly,  1916. 

Contains  a  few  incidents  in  the  life  of  this  noble  woman  while  serving  as  a 
nurse  in  the  present  war. 
RiNEHART,  Mrs.  M.  R. 

Kings,  queens  and  pawns.  An  American  woman  at  the  front.  N.  Y.,  Geo. 
H.  Doran  co.  [1915].  Chapters  on  Red  badge  of  mercy,  p.  325-352. 
Women  at  the  front,  230-337. 

Women  nurses  at  the  front  in  Belgium  and  the  work  done  by  the  Red  Cross. 
Mrs.  Rinehart  spent  some  time  in  the  hospitals  and  among  the  troops  In  Bel- 
glum  and  France,  and  this  book  contains  her  impressions  of  the  war. 
Sinclair,  May. 

A  Journal  of  impressions  in  Belgium.    N.  Y.,  Macmillan  &  co.,  1915,  294  p. 
Sutherland,  Millicent,  Fanny  (Duchess  of). 

Six  weeks  at  the  war.    London,  The  times,  1914,  116  p. 
Sutton-Pickhard,  M.  F. 

France  in  war  times.     London,  Methuen  &  co.,  ltd.  [1915].    201  p. 

This  tells  of  the  work  done  in  France  by  the  various  Red  Cross  organizations. 
T'Serclaes,  Baroness,  and  Mairi  Chisholm. 

The  cellar  house  of  Pervyse.    London,  A.  &  C.  Black,  ltd.,  1917,  26G  p. 

Personal  experiences  of  two  women  who,  beginning  as  nurses  at   the  front, 
established  a  "  poste  de  secours  "  close  to  the  trenches. 
Thurstan,  Violetta. 

Field  hospital  and  flying  column ;  being  the  journal  of  an  English  nursing 
sister  in  Belgium  and  Russia.  Ix)ndon  and  New  York,  G.  P.  Putnam's 
s-ons,  1915,  183  p. 

The  J}nglish  Red  Cross  nurse  who  writes  this  book  saw  service  on  the  two 
fronts  of  the  war. 
Van  Vorst,  Marie. 

War  letters  of  an  American  woman,  1916.     N.  Y.,  John  Lane  &  co.,  1916. 
The  author  served  as  a  member  of  the  American  ambulance  coi-ps  at  Neullly. 
Vivian,  E.  C,  and  Williams,  U.  E.  H. 

Way  of  the  Red  Cross.    N.  Y.,  G.  H.  Doran  &  co.,  1915. 
This  book  gives  details  about  the  Red  Cross  methods. 
A  War  nurse's  diary ;  sketches  from  a  Belgian  field  hospital.    N.  Y.,  The  Mac- 
millan CO.,  1918,  115  p. 

On  the  Western  Front, 
articles  in  periodicai>s. 
American  girl  in  the  French  army.     Literary  digest,  v.  53,  p.  S66-3G7.  August 
12,  1916. 

Some   hospital   experiences   of  an   American   girl   who   served   as  a   regularly 
enlisted  soldier  In  France. 


66  WOMAN   IN    THE   WAR. 

American  hospital  work  in  France.     Outlook,  v.  107,  p.  615-616,  November  18, 
1914. 

Shows  what  an   American  woman's  generosity  did  for  the  care  of  wounded 
soldiers  in  France. 
American  national  Red  Cross.     An  official  department  edited  by  W.  H.  Taft. 
Ladies'  home  journal,  June,  1917-July,  1918. 

A  page  which  appeared  each  month  in  this  magazine,  devoted  to  the  work  to 
be  done  by  this  society. 
America's  Red  Cross  in  Europe.     Literary  digest,  v.  51,  p.  778-779,  October  9, 
1915. 

Outlines  the  demands  of  the  Red  Cross  in  the  present  war. 
American  women  to  raise  France  from  her  ashes.    Literary  digest,  November  10, 

1917. 
Beckee,  May  Lambeeton. 

What  American  women  are  doing  in  France.     New  France,  v.  11,  p.  106- 
120,  June,  1918. 
BoiiLTON,  Harold. 

Our  nursing  service  in  France.  Nineteenth  century,  v.  81,  p.  651-660. 

An   account   of   the   fine   work    done   by    the    Red    Cross    nursing   service   in 
France. 
Delano,  Jane  A. 

Thirty  thousand  nurses  needed.     AVhat  American  women  and  girls  can  do. 
McCall's  magazine,  v.  45,  p.  18,  July,  1918. 
Gaines,  R. 

First  mass  at  Grecourt.     Survey,  November  10,  1917. 

The  personnel  and  early  work  of  the  Smith  college  unit. 
Yankee  peddlers  on  the  Somme.     Survey,  v.  39,  p.  594-596,  March  2,  1918. 
Smith  college  relief  unit  at  work. 
Jones,  Anna  Maxwell. 

What  women  artists  are  doing  in  war  relief.    General  federation  magazine, 
V.  17,  p.  38-39,  February,  1918. 
La  Motte,  E.  N. 

American  nurse  in  Paris.     Survey,  v.  34,  p.  333-334,  July  10,  1915. 
Lee,  Pauline  Sands. 

Women  relief  workers,  in  France.     Outlook,  v.  117,  p.  498-500,  March  28, 
1917. 

NiCHOLL,   L.   T. 

Eighteen  girls  from  Smith  College.     Ladies'  home  journal,   v.  35,   p.   19, 
April,  1918. 
Nurse's  experiences.     Incidents  of  life  in  a  French  hospital.     Current  opinion, 

V.  64,  p.  136,  February,  1918. 
Some  war  impressions  of  an  American  woman.     Outlook,  v.  112,  p.  632-637, 
March  15,  1916. 

English  woman  who  was  doing  hospital  work  in  France  in  which  she  gives 
her  impressions  of  the  war. 
Stobaed,  Mrs.  M.  S.  St.  C. 

War  or  women?    Contemporary  review,  v.  106,  p.  745-758,  December,  1914. 
Relates  the  experiences  of  the  nurses  in  the  woman's  hospital  units  at  Ant- 
werp during  one  of  the  sieges. 
The  theater  woman's  war  work.     Literary  digest,  v.  54,  p.  1848-1849,  June  16, 

1917. 
War  letters  of  an  American  woman.     Outlook,   v.   113,   p.   79^799,   863-868, 
August  20,  1916. 

These  entertaining  letters  written  by  a  young  New  England  woman  tell  of 
the  work  in  the  hospitals  of  France. 


WOMAN   EST   THE   WAR.  67 

Waeben,  M.  R. 

Women  over  there.     Woman's  home  companion,  v.  44,  p.  13-14,  Decemb^ 
1917. 
What  American  girls  are  dping  in  France.     Independent,  v.  92,  p.  248-249, 

November  3,  1917. 
Where  college  girls  are  doing  social  service.     French  relief  work.     Literary 

digest,  p.  40,  December  1,  1917. 
Where  France  receives  her  own.    Independent,  v.  94,  p.  168-169,  April  27,  1918. 

The  story  of  Evian,  the  gateway  from  captivity  to  freedom. 
White,  H.  H. 

Rolling  pins,  fruit  trees,  and  shoes.     Independent,  August  11,  1917. 
Th€  first  college  woman's  unit  to  work  in  France. 

With  the  suffrage  hospitals  in  the  Fi'ench  war  zone.     Woman  citizen,  v.  3,  p. 

128-129,  132,  138,  July  13,  1918. 
Wolfs,  Marie  L. 

The  last  to  leave.    Independent,  v.  94,  p.  470-471,  485,  June  22,  1918. 
Women  doctors'  wonderful  work  amid  war's  horrors.     Literary  digest,  v.  56, 

p.  40-41,  February  16,  1918. 
Working  visit  to  the  Smith  college  girls  unit  at  Grecourt     Literary  digest,  v. 

56,  p.  53-55,  March  23,  1918. 

On  the  Eastebn  Feont. 

BOOKS. 
AUEKSINSKAIA,    TaTIANA. 

With  the  Russian  wounded,  with  an  introduction  by  Gregor  Alexinsky.    Tr. 
by  Gilbert  Cannan.     Loudon,  T.  F.  Unwin,  ltd.,  479  p.,  1916. 
Dearmer,  Mable. 

Letters  from  a  field  hospital,  with  a  memoir  of  the  author  by  Stephen 
Gwynn.     London,  Macmillan  &  co.,  ltd.,  1915. 

A  series  of  letters  giving  experiences  of  Englishwomen  in  a  field  hospital  in 
Serbia. 
Livingston,  St.  Clair. 

Serbia,     (/w  Under  three  flags  with  the  Red  Cross  in  Belgium,  France,  and 
Serbia.)     London,  1916,  p,  107-221. 
Marchant,  Bessie. 

A.  V.  A.  D.  in  Salonica  ;  the  story  of  a  girl's  work  in  the  great  war.    Loudon, 
Blackie. 
Matthews,  Mrs.  Caroline  Twigos, 

Experiences  of  a  woman  doctor  in  Serbia.    London,  Mills  &  Boon,  ltd.,  1916, 
246  p. 
Sandes,  Flora. 

An  English-woman-sergeant  in  the  Serbian  army,  with  an  introduction  by 
Slavko  Y.  Grouitch.     London,  New  York,  etc.,  Hodder  &  Stoughton,  1916, 
242  p. 
Stanley,  Monica  M. 

My  diary  in  Serbia,  April  1,  1915,  to  November  1,  1915.    London,  Simpkin, 
Marshall,  Hamilton,  Kent  &  co.,  ltd.     (1916).    128  p. 
A  nurse  attached  to  the  Stobart  field  hospital. 
Stobaet,  Mrs.  St.  Clair. 

The  flaming  sword  in  Serbia  and  elsewhere.     N.  Y.,  Geo.  H.  Doran  &  co., 
1916,  325  p. 

By  the  first  woman  in  history  to  mobilize  and  command  a  field  hospital  in 
war. 


68  WOMAN  IN  THE  WAR, 

GENERAL. 
THE  BALKANS  AND  GREECE, 

BOOKS   AND   PAMPHI.EXS. 

Askew,  Alice  and  Claude. 

The  stricken  land.     Serbia;  as  we'siiw  it     London,  Nash  co.,  ltd.,  1916, 
362  p. 

An  account  of  an  eyewitness  in  the  Serbian  retreat, 
Farnam,  Ruth  S. 

A  nation  at  bay.    What  an  American  woman  saw  and  did   in  suffering 
Serbia.     Indianapolis,  The  Bobbs-Merrill  co.,  1918,  229  p. 
The  writer  was  a  sergeant  in  the^erbian  army. 
GoEDON,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Jan. 

The  luck  of  thirteen ;  ^vanderings  and  flight  tlirough  Montenegro  and  Ser- 
bia.   London,  Smith,  Elder  &  co.,  1916,  378  p. 
Kennaed,  Lady. 

A  Roumanian  diary,  1915-1917.    N.  Y.,  Dodd,  Mead  &  co.,  1918,  201  p. 

An  eyewitness's  account  of  conditions  In  Roumania  before  her  declaration  of 
war  and  during  subsequent  events. 
Vaka,  Demetra. 

In  the  heart  of  German  intrigue.     N.  Y.,  Houghton,  Mifflin  co.,  1918,  878  p. 
The  author's  experiences  in  Greece. 

ARTICLES   IN    plHilODICALS. 
ESTEP,   E.   R. 

Women's  work  on  the  Serbian  front.     Leslie's  weekly,  v.  124,  p.  697.  June 
7,  1917.  * 

Faenam,  Ruth  S. 

Serbia   surrenders   only   to   God.     Red   Cross  magazine,    v.    13,   p.    52-53, 
August,  1918. 
Rtead,  Estelle  M. 
.    A  woman  pioneer.    Mrs.  St.  Clair  Hobart  and  her  work  In  Serbia.    Review 
of  reviews,  London,  v.  53,  p.  105-108,  February,  1916. 
Stobart,  Mrs.  M.  A.  St.  C. 

Woman  in  the  midst  of  war.    Ladies'  home  journal,  v.  32,  p.  5-6,  January, 

1915. 

The   experiences   of   Mrs.   Stobart,   who   organized   a   Red   Cross   hospital  unit 
and  took  them  to  the  Balkans,  where  their  services  were  much  needed. 
Vaka,  Demetra. 

Queen  of  Greece  but  princess  of  Prussia.    Delineator,  v.  92,  p.  5,  May,  1918. 

BELGIUM. 

books. 
Cammaerts,  Emile, 

Through  the  iron  bars.     New  York,  John  Lane  co.,  1917. 
Belgium   life  under  German   occupation. 
KzLLOGQ,   Charlotte. 

Women  of  Belgium ;  turning  tragedy  to  triumph.     With  an  Introduction 
by  Herbert  C.  Hoover.     New  York  and  London,  Funk  &  Wagnalls  co., 
1917,  210  p. 
Mack,  Louise   (Creehd,  Mrs.). 

Woman's  experience  in  the  great  war.     London,  T.  Fisher  Unwin,  1915. 

Louise   Mack   was  the   only   English  woman   to  stay   in   Anlvrerp  during  the 
German   occupation. 


WOMAN    IN    THE    WA31.  69 

MOKVELD,    L. 

The  German  fury  in  Belgium.  War  correspondent  of  the  De  Tijd,  a  Dutch 
newspaper,  during  four  months  with  the  German  army  in  Belgium. 
New  York,  Geo.  H.  Doran  co. 

An    eyewitness's    report.      Concerned    with    women    and    children. 
Sinclair,  May. 

A  journal  of  impressions  in  Belgium.  N.  Y.,  The  Macmillan  co.,  1915, 
294  p. 

CANADA. 

BOOKS    AND    PAMPHLErrS. 

Canadian  annual  review  of  public  affairs.     Toronto,  1017,  029  p.     Women  and 

the  war,  I.  O.  D.  B.,  woman  suffrage,  p.  418-429. 
McClung,  Nellie  L. 

The  next  of  kin,  those  who  wait  and  wonder.  Boston  and  N.  Y.,  Hough- 
ton, Mifflin  CO.,  1917,  257  p. 

Describes  the  reaction  of  Canadian  women   to  the  great  war. 
MacMurchy,   Ma.jory. 

Woman — bless  her !  With  the  subtitle,  "  Not  so  amiable  as  it  sounds," 
N.  Y.,  Geo.  H.  Doran  &  co. 

Appeal   to   the  women  of  Canada  and   to  women   in  general   in   the  warring 
countries  for  the  proper  recognition  of  their  work  In  war  and  reconstmction. 

ABTICLES    IN    PERIODICALS. 

Canadian  women  and  the  great  war.    Literary  digest,  v.  54,  p.  1.39-144,  January 
20,  1917. 

Shows  what  share  of  the  burdens  of  war  is  being  taken  by  the  women  of 
Canada. 
Durham,  Mabel. 

British  Columbia's  patriotic  women.  Canadian  magazines,  v.  49,  p.  9^100, 
June,  1917. 

Response  of  women  to  call  for  service. 
Htjestis,  M.  J. 

Women  workers  of  Canada.    Scientific  American,  January  12,  1918. 
Personal  experiences  in  a  Canadian  rifle  factory. 
Merchant,  F.  W. 

The  war  and  industrial  education  in  Canada.  Manual  training,  v.  19,  p. 
117-121,  December,  1917. 

P.   117-118   shows  how   vocational   schools  have  been   used   to   train   women 
for  war  activities. 
Spillane,  Richard. 

Canadian  women  and  the  war.    Outlook,  v.  113,  p.  96-101,  May  10,  1916. 

Describes   their  social   welfare  work  and  the  various  organizations   recently 
formed  for  relief  work. 
Women  in  machine  shops,    ximerican  machinist,  p.  207,  September  20,  1917. 
War  work  in  Canada. 

FRANCE. 

books  and  pamphlets 

Abensour.  Leon. 

Les  vaillantes;  heroines,  mnrtyres  et  remplacentes.  Avec  une  preface  de 
Louis  Barthou.    Paris,  Chapelot,  1917,  312  p. 


70  WOMAN    IN    THE    WAB. 

AlDRICH,   MrLDRED. 

A  hilltop  on  the  I\Iarne.     Boston  and  New  York,  Hontjhton,  Mifflin  co.,  1915. 
One    of    the    first    records    of   personal    experience    in    the    first    German    in- 
vasion, which  gives  an  account  of  the  battle  of  the  Marne. 
Aldrich,  Mildred. 

On  the  edge  of  the  war  zone.    Boston.  Small,  Maynard  &  co.,  1917,  311  p. 
From  the  battle  of  the  Marne  to  the  entrance  of  the  Stars  and  Stripes. 
Atherton,  Gertrude. 

The  living  present.     New  York,  Frederick  A.  Stokes  co.,  1917,  p.  303. 

Describes    the    war    time    work    of    the    French    women,    and    discusses    the 
effect  of  the  war  upon  their  lives. 
Barnard,  Charles  Inman. 

Paris  war  days ;  diary  of  an  American.    Boston,  Little,  Brown  &  co.,  1914, 
226  p. 
Barthotj,  Louis. 

L'effort  de  la  femme  frangaise.     Paris,  Bloud  &  Gay,  1917,  p.  31. 
Blatch,  Harriot  S. 

Mobilizing  women  in  France.     (In  Mobilizing  woman  power.    N.  Y.,  1918, 
p.  60-74.) 
CouRSON,  Barbara. 

Woman  of  France  and  the  war.    International  Catholic  truth  society,  1915. 
Dark,  Sydney. 

The  glory  that  is  France.    London,  Nash. 

"  I  suggest,"  says  the  author  in  speaking  of  the  part  French  women  play 
in  the  everyday  activities  of  French  life,  "  that  if  we  are  to  learn  the  secret 
of  French  greatness  of  France,  Englishwomen,  particularly  of  the  lower  middle 
and  working  classes,  should  be  sent  to  learn  from  French  women  in  city, 
town,  and  village," 
Dodd,  Anna  B. 

Heroic  France.     London,  Allen  &  Unwin;  N.  Y.,  Poor's  Manual  co.,  1915, 

215  p. 

An  account  of  events  in  Paris,  July  and  August,  1914,  by  an  American. 

Drumant,  Mme.  Edouard  Adolphe. 

Journal  of  the  wife  of  the  famous   antisemite.     New  York,   Longmans, 
Green  &  co.,  1916,  167  p. 
Huard,  Baroness  Frances  Wilson. 

My  home  on  the  field  of  honor.    N.  Y.,  Geo.  H.  Doran  &  co.  [1916],  302  p. 

Personal   experiences   during   the   invasion   of   France. 
My  home  on  the  field  of  mercy.    N.  Y.,  Geo.  H.  Doran  &  co.  [1917]. 
La  Hire,  Mme.  Marie. 

La  femme  frangaise  son  activite  pendant  la  guerre.     Paris,  J.  Tallandier 
[1917],  302  p. 
Le  Guiner,  Jeanne. 

Letters  from  France.     N.  Y.,  Houghton,  Mifflin  co.,  1916,  100  p. 

Written  to  a  friend  in  this  country  giving  a  picture  of  war  time  life. 
Letters  of  a  soldier  to  his  mother.    1914-15.    London,  Constable  &  co.,  ltd. 

This  French  soldier,  whose  name  is  not  given,  disappeared.     The  book  is  on 
the  order  of  Hankey's  Student  in  arms. 
Mas  SON,  Frederic. 

Les  femme  et  la  guerre  de  1914.    Paris,  Bloud  &  Gay,  1915,  32  p.     ('*  Pages 
actuelles,"  1914-15,  No.  2.) 
Peatz,  Claire  de. 

A  French  woman's  notes  on  the  war.     London,  Constable  &  co.,  ltd.,  1916, 
290  p. 
Van  Vorst,  Marie. 

War  letters  of  an  American  woman.    N.  Y.,  John  Lane  co.,  1916,  328  p. 


WOMAN   IN    THE   WAR.  71 

Waddington,  Maey  King. 

My  war  diary.     New  York,  Charles  Scribner's  sons,  1917,  373  p. 

The  author  left  Paris,  saw  some  of  the  devastation,  took  part  in  the  relief 
work  and  had  soldiers  quartered  in  her  home. 
Waeren,  Maude  Radfoed. 

The  white  flame  of  France.    Boston,  Small,  Maynard  &  co.,  358  p.  (1918.) 
Whaeton,  Edith. 

Fighting  France,  from  Dunkerque  to  Belfort.     N.  Y.,  Charles  Scribner's 
sons,  1915,  238  p. 

asncles  in  periodicals. 

Atherton,  Gertrude. 

Women  of  France.     Delineator,  v.  90,  February,  March.  April,  1917.     (See 
also  Delineator,  v.  91,  p.  17,  October,  1917.) 

An  account  of  the  efforts  of  the  French  women  in  all  lines  of  work. 
Bernhardt,  Saeah. 

My  France.    Ladies'  home  journal,  v.  35,  p.  11,  February,  1917. 
Deland  Maegaeet. 

Napoleon  and  others.    Woman's  home  companion,  v.  45,  p.  13-14,  52-53. 
Things  we  thought  were  big.  Woman's  home  companion,  v.  45,  p.  13-14, 
August,  1918  (illus.). 
Dodge,  H.  F. 

Godmothers  to  the  trenches.     Harper's  weekly,  v.  62,  p.  329,  April  1,  1916. 
Tells  of  the  many  French  women  who  have  become  godmothers  to  the  sol- 
diers. 
Ellicott-Caer,  Edna. 

True  atmosphere  of  war.    Living  age,  v.  285,  p.  671-677. 
War  impressions  of  an  American  girl  in  France. 
Montizambert,  E, 

Our  portion  at  Versailles.   Canadian  magazine,  v.  46,  p.  317-320,  February, 
1916. 

A   brief   article   telling   how   a   young   French   girl   made   her   war  work   the 
tending  of  the  graves  of  the  Canadian  heroes. 
Perrot,  M.  de. 

War  time  women  of  France.    Bellman,  v.  23,  p.  598-602,  December  1,  1917. 
Strong,  R. 

Women  m  France  after  the  war.     Living  age,  v.  291,  p.  627,  December  9, 
1916. 

Comparison    between    the    way    English    and    French    men    feel    about    their 
women. 
Treadwell,  Sophie. 

Women  in  black.    Harper's  weekly,  v.  61,  p.  111-112,  .July  31,  1915. 
The  urgent  duty  of  women.    Nation,  v.  103,  sup.,  August  3,  1916. 
French  women's  league  for  permanent  peace. 
Vanderbilt,  Mrs.  W.  K. 

My  trip  to  the  front.     Harper's  magazine,  v.  134,  p.  175-178,  January,  1917. 
The  writer  was  permitted  to  accompany  on  one  of  his  inspection  tours  the 
inspector  general  of  the  field  service  of  the  American  ambulance. 
VoRSE,  Mary  H. 

Sinistrees  of  France.     Century,  v.  93,  p.  445-450,  January,  1917. 
W^ar  and  women  in  France.    Biblical  world,  v.  49,  p.  Ill,  February,  1917. 
Woman  as  the  source  of  the  Frenchman's  strength  in  the  test  of  war.    Current 

opinion,  v.  61,  p.  113-114,  August,  1916. 
Work  of  women  in  France  and  allied  countries.     Revue  des  deux  mondes,  p. 
175-204,  September  1,  1916. 


72  WOMAN    IN    THE   WAR. 

GERMANY    AND    HUNGARY. 

books  and  pamphlets. 

Atheeton,  Gertiji^de. 

The  white  morning  (fiction).    N.  Y.,  Frederick  A.  Stokes  co.,  1918. 

The   women   of   Germany   before   the   war  are   portrayed   and   a   prophecy    Is 
made  of  their  revolution. 
Blatch,  Harriot  Stanton. 

Mobilizing   women    in   Germany.      (In   Mobilizing  woman   power.     N.   Y., 
1918,  p.  75-85.) 
Braun,  LrLY  (von  Keetschman)  von  Gisycki. 

Die  frauen  und  der  krieg.    Leipsig,  S.  Hirzel,  1915,  53  p.    Zwischen  krieg 
und  frieden,  17. 
Bullitt,  Ebnesta  Dkinkek. 

An  uncensored  diary  from  the  central  empires.     Garden  City,  N.  Y.,  Dou- 
bleday,  Page  &  co.,  1917,  205  p. 

One   of   the    few   books   from   women   who   were   in   central   countries   during 
hostilities. 
Cholmondely,  Alice  (pseud.). 

Christine  (fiction).     N.  Y.,  Macmillan  co.,  1917. 

Description  of  German  life  in  the  first  days  of  the  war. 
CuBTiN,  Thomas. 

The  land  of  deepening  shadow.    Germany  at  war.    N.  Y.,  Geo.  H.  Doran  & 
CO.  (1917). 

Chapter  on   women  in   shadow   tells  of  condition  of   German   women   during 
war  time. 
DoTY,  Madm^eine  Z. 

Short  Rjitions.    An  American  woman  in  Germany  1915-16.    N.  Y.,  Century 
CO.,  1917,  274  p. 

Author   was   sent   from    this   country   to   distribute   funds   collected   here    for 
relief  of  sufferinc?  women  and  children  in  Germany. 
Edwards,  Matilda  B.  B. 

Under  the  German  ban  in  Alsace  and  Lorraine.    N.  Y.,  Dutton  &  co.,  1915. 
Haknack,  Agnes  von. 

Die  krieg  und  die  fraiien.    Berlin,  Springer,  22  p. 
Jephson,  Lady. 

A  war  time  journal.    London,  E.  Mathews,  1915,  99  p. 

A  record  of  two  months  detention  in  a  German  town  at  the  beginning  of  the 
war,  including  notes  and  sketches  of  German  plans  and  people. 
Koebner,  Gertrude. 

Drei  monate  kriegs  gefangen;  erlebnisse  einer  deutschin  in  Frankreich. 
Berlin,  Kronen  verlag,  1915. 
Littlefair,  Mary. 

An  English  girl's  adventures  in  hostile  Germany.    London,  John  Long,  ltd., 
1915,  128  p. 
Lloyd,  Gladys. 

An  Englishwoman's  adventures  in  the  German  lines.    London,  C.  A.  Pear- 
son, ltd.,  1914,  128  p. 
McAuley,  Mary  Ethel. 

Germany  in  war  time.    Open  court  pub.  co.,  1918,  297  p. 

Personal  experiences  of  an  American  girl  in  Germany  during  two  years  of 
the  war. 
MacDonald,  Mina. 

Some  experiences  in  Hungary.     N.  Y.,  Longmans,  Green  &,  co.,  1916,  135  p. 
The  experience  of  an  English  girl  in  Hungary, 


WOMAN   IN    THE   WAR.  73 

Pain,  Ellen  M. 

My  impressions  of  East  Prussia.    Jarrold,  1915. 

POEHLMAN,    ChEISTOF. 

Die  deutsche  frau  nach  1914,     Munchen,  Schmidt,  74  p. 

abticles  in  peeiodicals. 
Atheeton,  Geetbude. 

The  women  of  Germany :  An  argument  for  my  novel,  The  white  morning. 
Bookman,  v.  46,  p.  630-635,  February,  1918. 
Baumee,  Geetbude. 

How  German  women  are  serving  in  war.    Six  articles  in  New  York  evening 
mail,  September  19-23,  1916. 

Describes  the  social  welfare  work  of  the  Nationale  frauendienst. 
Beatjn,  Llly. 

War  and  the  duty  of  motherhood.     Current  history,  v.  6,  p.  324-325,  May, 
1917. 

This  noted  feminist  leader  urges  that  the  state's  greatest  claim  on  women 
after  the  war  will  be  as  mothers — citizens. 
German  women  and  the  war.    Everyman,  v.  8,  p.  269-270,  July  21,  1916. 
Geeaed,  J.  W. 

What  the  German  women  have  done.    Ladies'  home  journal,  p.  83,  Novem- 
ber, 1917. 
Haenack,  Dr.  Agnes  von. 

The  civil  work  of  German  women  in  war  times.     Current  history,  v.  5,  p. 
97-102,  October,  1916. 

Tells  of  the  work  of  the  Nationale  frauendienst. 
Keek,  Caroline  V. 

German  women  as  war  workers.     Current  history,  v.  6,  p.  353-357,  May, 
1917. 

The  writer  served  for  many  years  as  Berlin  correspondent  of  a  New  York 
paper.     She  tells  of  the  war-time  work  of  the  royal  German  women. 
ToEPLiTZ,  Jean. 

German  woman's  work  in  war  time.     Current  history,  v.  4,  p.  315-320, 
May,  1916. 

An  article  telling  of  the  replacement  of  men  by  women  in  industry  and  the 
professions. 
Universal  service  for  women.     Independent,  v.  84,  p.  458,  December  20,  1915. 

New  direction  of  the  feministic  movement  to  train  women  for  their  duties 
to  the  state. 

GREAT    BRITAIN. 

BOOKS    AND    PAMPHLETS. 

AusTEiAN,  Delia. 

Ways  of  war  and  peace.     Larchmont,  N.  Y.,  Stanope-Dodge  pub.  co.,  1914, 
207  p. 

What  royal  women  are  doing  while  their  husbands  are  at  war,  p.  144-150. 
Begbie,  Habold. 

The  queen's  net;  true  stories  of  all  sorts  and  conditions  of  women  saved 
from  the  war  flood  of  suffering,  privation  f*nd  despair  by  the  Queen's 
work  for  women  fund.     London  and  N.  Y.,  Hodder  &  Stoughton,  1915, 
Tells  how  the  first  adjustments  were  made, 

Churchill,  Jennie,  Lady  Randolph,  ed. 

Women's  war  work.    London,  C.  A.  Pearson,  ltd.,  1916,  159  p. 
Ellis,  Havelock. 

Essays  in  war  time.    Boston  and  N.  Y.,  Houghton,  Mifflin  co.,  1917,  247  p. 


74  WOMAN   IN    THE   WAR. 

Fraser,  Helen. 

Women  and  war  work.     N.  Y.,  G.  Arnold  Shaw,  1918,  308  p. 
The  story  of  English  women  written  for  American  women. 

McLaren,  Barbara   (Hon.  Mrs.  Francis). 

Women  of  the  war,  with  an  introduction  by  the  Right  Hon.  H.  H.  Asquith, 
M.  P.     N.  Y.,  Geo.  H.  Doran  co.,  1918. 

The  account  of  many  prominent  women  in  England  in  different  lines  of  work. 
Repplier,  Agnes. 

Women  and  war.     (In  Counter-currents.    New  York,  1916,  p.  98-135.) 
This  shows  the  moral  issue  in  the  war  that  the  pacifists  did  not  sec. 
SCHREINEE,    OlIVTE, 

Women  and  war.     (In  Woman  and  labor.     N.  Y.,  1914.) 

This  shows  what  war  means  to  women  and  their  relation  to  war. 
Stone,  Giijjert,  ed. 

Women    war   workers.     Accounts    contributed   by    representative    workers 
of  the  work  done  by  women  in  the  more  important  branches  of  war 
employment,    with    a    foreword    by    Lady   Jellicoe.     N.    Y.,    Thomas    Y. 
Crowell  CO.,  1917,  320  p. 
Ward,  Mrs.  Humphrey. 

England's  effort.     Letters  to  an  American  friend,  with  a  preface  by  Joseph 

H.  Choate.     N.  Y.,  Charles  Scribner's  sons,  1916,  218  p. 
Towards  the  goal,  with  a  preface  by  Theodore  Roosevelt     N.  Y.,  Charles 
Scribner's  sons,  1917,  231  p. 
Warwick,  Frances  E.  (Countess  of). 

A  woman  and  the  war.    N.  Y.,  Geo.  H.  Doran  co.,  1916,  270  p. 
Wells,  H.   G. 

What    the   war    is    doing   for    women.      (In   What    is    coming.      1916,    p. 
159-188.) 

Mr.    Wells   believes    it    will    have    a    tendency    to    make    women    more    inde- 
pendent in  the  future. 
Women's  work  in  the  war.     (In  The  times  history  of  the  war,  London,  1915, 

V.  4,  p.  241-281,  481-512.) 
Woman's  imperial  health   association.     An  everyday  directory  for  war  time. 
Compiled   and   published   by   the   women's   imperial    health    association 
and  women's  emergency  corps,  London,  36  p. 
Zangwill,  Israel. 

Woman  and  war.     (/n  War  for  the  world.     1916,  p.  321-343.) 

The   author   treats   of   woman   in  war   as   worker,   as   fighter,   and   as   peaee- 
maker. 

GREAT    BRITAIN. 

periodical  articles. 
Alec-Tweedie,   Mrs. 

Women  and  war  economy.     English  review,  v.  22,  p.  353-359,  April,  1916. 
The  writer  says   that   although   the   men   are   constantly   talking  of   economy 
during  war  times,  the  real  burden  of  it  falls  to  the  women. 
BnxiNGTON,  Mary  Frances. 

Woman's  share  in  war  work.     Living  age,  v.  288,  p.  739-747,  March  18, 
1916. 
Bailey,  S. 

War  and  woman  suffrage.     Fortnightly  review,  v.  107,  p.  1020-1026,  June, 
1917. 
Blathwayt,  R. 

Reformation  or  re-formation.    Living  age,  v.  29,  p.  173-175,  April  21,  1917. 
Shows  change  toward  self-consciousness. 


WOMAN   IN   THE   WAB.  75 

Channing,  G.  E. 

War,  woman's  business.     Touchstone,  v.  2,  p.  241-247,  December,  1917. 
Coming  to.     Spectator,  v.  118,  p.  329-330,  March  17,  1917.     Living  age,  v.  293, 
p.  633-636  June  6,  1917. 

A  discussion  of  the  change  the  war  is  making  in  the  life  of  every  woman. 
English  women  and  the  war.     Survey,  v.  36,  p.  597,  September  16,  1916. 

The  worls  of  the  educated  leisure  class. 
Effects  of  the  European  war  on  the  woteian's  movement.    Current  opinion,  v.  59, 

p.  259-260,  October,  1915. 
Patttjlg,  George. 

The  tommywaacs.    Saturday  evening  post,  December  8,  1917. 
Description  of  the  women's  army  auxiliary  corps. 
Pictures  of  England's  war  work.    Literary  digest,  v.  56,  p.  38-39,  April  6,  1918. 
Description   of   lithographs   of   English    artists,   giving   a   pictorial    record  of 
England  during  war  time,  showing  women  at  their  work. 
The  place  of  educated  women  in  reconstruction.     Women's  employment,  v.  17, 

p.  3,  June  15,  1917. 
Singh,  St.  N. 

War,  the  leveler.    Living  age,  v.  295,  p.  479-482,  November  24,  1917. 
War  and  women.     Living  age,  v.  291,  p.  793-798,  December  30,  1916. 
West,  Rebecca. 

Women  of  England.     Atlantic  monthly,  v.  117,  p.  1-11,  January,  1916. 
Showing  the  changes  that  the  war  has  brought  to  English  life. 
Women  and  fear.     Spectator,  p.  909-910,  December  25,  1915. 

The  feai'lessness  of  women  during  the  war. 
Women  and  the  war.    Living  Agfe','  V^  286,  p.  628-631,  September  4,  1915. 

The  effect  of  war  upoh  woman  is  here  discussed  from  a  psychological  stand- 
point.    Tells  of  her  mar>,y  sa^Tifices  during  war  times. 

'  TlTAiY. 

books  and  articles  in  periodicals. 

Paola  Donna   (Baronchelli-grosson). 

La  donna  bella  nuova  Italia.    Maggio,  1915-Maggio,  1917.    Milan,  Riccardo 
Quintieri. 
Clarke,  F.  B. 

New  woman  in  Italy.    World  outlook,  v.  3,  p.  23,  October,  1917. 

RUSSIA. 

BOOKS. 

DoBE,  Rheta  Childe. 

Inside  the  Russian  revolution.  (Illus.)  N.  Y.,  MacMilHan  co.,  1917.  243  p. 
The  battalion  of  death,  p.  50-88. 

Description   of   conditions   in   Russia   from    May    to    SepU-mber,    1917,   by   an 
American  war  correspondent. 
Habpee,  Florence. 

Runaway  Russia.    N.  Y.,  Century  co.,  1918,  350  p. 
As  the  revolution  affected  women. 
Mouchanow,  Madame  Marfa. 

My  empress:  twenty-three  years  of  intimate  life  with  the  empress  of  all 
the  Russias,  from  her  marriage  to  the  day  of  her  exile,  bj  the  first  maid 
in  waiting  to  her  former  majesty,  the  Czarina  Alexandra  of  Russia. 
N.  Y.,  John  Lane  co.,  191S. 


76  WOMAN   IN    THE   WAE. 

The  soul  of  Russia.    Edited  by  Winifred  Stephens  in  aid  of  the  fund  for  Rus- 
sian refugees  administered  bj^  the  general  committee  of  all  the  Russian 
union  of  zemstvos  under  the  presidency  of  Prince  G.  B.  Lvov.     Lon- 
don, Macmillan  &  co.,  ltd.,  1916,  v.  xvii,  307  p.,  illus. 
TiTBCZYNOwicz,  Lauea  de  Gozdawa. 

When  the  Prussians  came  to  Poland.  N.  Y.  and  London,  G.  P.  Putnam's 
sons,  1916,  281  p. 

The  story  of  an  American  woman,   wife  of  a  Polish  noble,  whose  home  be- 
came Von  BUndenburg's  headquarters  when  the  Germans  Invaded  Poland. 

ABTECLES   IN   PEKIODICALS. 

Battalion  of  death;  made  of  women  soldiers  who  are  to-day  fighting  Russia's 

battle.    Touchstone,  t.  1,  p.  431-435,  September,  1917. 
Beatty,  Bessie. 

We  fight  for  Russia.    Woman's  home  companion,  v.  45,  p.  10,  March,  1918. 
The  story  of  the  famous  battalion  of  death. 
Levine,  Isaac  Don. 

The  new  Russia;  a  myth  or  a  reality?    New  York  times  current  history, 
v.  4,  p.  1074-1078,  September,  1916;  Woman's  work,  p.  1076. 
Russian  women  in  war.    Pan  American  monthly,  v.  26,  p.  23-26,  November,  1917. 
Russian  women's  enfranchisement.     Christian  science  monitor,  December  10, 

1917. 

Outline  given  of  firm  stand  taken  in  the  early  days  of  the  revolution  to  secure 
extension  of  the  franchise. 
Shepherd,  William  J. 

The  soul  that  stirs  in  battalions  of  death.     Delineator,  v.  92,  p.  5-7,  56, 
March,  1918. 
Those  Russian  women.     Literary  digest  v.  55,  p.  48,  September  29,  1917. 
Warrior  women.    Literary  digest,  v.  50,  p   1-^GO,  June  19.  1915. 

A  short  account  of  how  individual  Russian  women  have  prepared  themselves 
to  bear  arms  and  actually  serve  in  regiments. 
Young  girls  fighting  on  the  Russian  front.     New  York  times  current  history, 
V.  4,  p.  365-366,  May,  1916. 

WOMEN  IN  OTHER  WARS. 
Baeton,  C.  H. 

Red  Cross  in  Cuba.     Outlook,  v.  58,  p.  911-916,  April  9,  1918. 

An  account  of  the  relief  work  done  by  the     Bed  Cross  nurses  in  the  Spaa- 
ish-American   war. 
Bbockett,  L.  L.,  and  Mrs.  M.  C.  Vatjghan. 
Woman's  work  in  the  civil  war.     1867. 

Takes   up    the   work    of   women   during    the    civil    war    particularly    that   of 
nursing,   and   of   the   organizations   formed   for  relief   work. 
Beuce,  H.  a. 

Women  in  the  making  of  America.  N.  Y.,  Little,  Brown  &  co.,  1912.  See 
chapters  on  Women  of  revolution,  p.  81-114 ;  Woman's  work  in  the  civil 
war,  p.  188-223. 

Tells  of  work  of  women  in  these  two  wars,  such  as  hospital  work,  farming 
and  the  work  of  raising  money  for  relief  purposes. 
Clay,  Olfver. 

Daughters  of  liberty.  (In  Heroes  of  the  American  revolution.  N.  Y.,  Duf- 
field,  1916,  p.  200-229.) 

Shows  the  work   of  the  women  prominont   in   the   revolution   such   as  Molly 
Pitcher,  Deborah  Samson,  and  the  work  and  sacrifices  of  many  other  women. 


WOMAN   IN    THE   WAR.  77. 

Epijsb,  p.  H. 

Life  of  Clara  Barton.    N.  Y.,  Macmillan,  1915.     See  contents  for  her  work 
in  war. 

These   chapters  give   vivid   accounts   of  the   work   done   by   this   well-known 
nurse  In  relief  work  of  war. 
Gbibble,  Francis. 

Women  in  war.    N.  Y.,  G.  H.  Doran  co.,  1917. 

Made  up  of  historical  sketches  of  wom«n  who  have  fought  in  other  wars. 
Has  some   first-hand  observations  of  the  mobilization  of  women   for  war  pur- 
poses, gained  during  author's  stay  of  a  year  in  a  detention  camp. 
HOBHOUSE,  Emily. 

The  brunt  of  the  war  and  where  it  fell.     With  map  and  9  illustrations. 
London,  Methuen  &  co.,  1902,  355  p. 
HuEN,  E.  A. 

Wisconsin  women  in  the  war  between  the  states.    Madison,  Wisconsin  his- 
tory commission,  1911. 

An  account  of  the  part  played  by  the  women  of  Wisconsin  in  the  civil  war. 
Shows  how  they  had  to  take  up  the  work  of  the  men  and  tells  of  the  relief 
work  done  by  them. 
Logan,  Mrs.  J.  A. 

Part  taken  by  women  in  American  history.    Wilmington,  Del.,  Parry  Nalle, 
1912.     See  contents  for  women  in  the  revolution  and  civil  wars. 

She  treats  of  women  as  Deborah  Samson,  Molly  Pitcher,  and  Cornelia  Beek- 
man  of  the  revolution  and  Clara  Barton,  Mother  Bickerdyke,  and  others  of  the 
civil  war. 
LuNT,  Dolly  Sumnee  (Mrs.  Thomas  Bukge). 

A  woman's  war  time  jourral.     New  York,  Century  co.,  1918,  70  p. 
A  journal  of  the  civil  war,  describing  Sherman's  march  to  the  sea. 
MooBE,  Fbank. 

Women  of  the  war;   their  heroism  and   self-sacrifice.     Hartford,   Conn., 
Scranton,  1866. 

This  book  gives  a  good  Id-^a  oi  how  women  helped  in  many  ways  daring  the 
dvll  war. 
BiCHABDS,  Mrs.  L.  E. 

Florence  Nightingale,  the  angel  of  the  Crimea.    New  York,  D.  Appleton  co., 
1909. 

The   story    of   Florence   Nightingale's   career   as   a   nurse,   and    the   hospital 
situation  during  the  war. 
Btobaet,  Mrs.  M.  A. 

Women  in  war.     Contemporary  review,  v.  103,  p.  266-332,  February,  1913. 
Same  article  reprinted  in  Living  age,  v.  276,  p.  579-584,  March  8,  1913. 
A  graphic  account  of  the  work  done  by  women  nurses  of  the   Red  Cross  in 
the  Balkan  war.     It  satisfactorily  answers  the  question  raised  at  the  time  as 
to  whether  women  were  capable  of  doing  war  relief  work. 
What  the  women  of  the  north  and  south  did  during  the  civil  war  in  America 
and  what  the  women  are  doing  in  Great  Britain  during  the  war  of 
1914.    Dally  mail,  London,  January  19,  1916. 
Women  in  the  rerolutionary  war.     Americana,  p.  647,  July,  1916. 


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